Giant drag reduction due to interstitial air in sand

ORAL

Abstract

When an object impacts onto a bed of very loose, fine sand, the drag it experiences depends on the ambient pressure in a surprising way: Drag is found to increase significantly with decreasing pressure. We use a modified penetrometer experiment to investigate this effect and directly measure the drag on a sphere as a function of both velocity and pressure. We observe a drag reduction of over 90\% and trace this effect back to the presence of air in the pores between the sand grains. Finally, we construct a model based on the modification of grain-grain interactions that is in full quantitative agreement with the experiments.

Authors

  • Devaraj van der Meer

    Univ. of Twente, University of Twente, The Netherlands

  • Tess Homan

    Laboratoire de Physique, ENS Lyon, France