April 7, 1998, Tuesday
Section: Science Desk
Physicists Study the Honeybee For Clues to Complex Problems
By MALCOLM W. BROWNE
HOW doth the little busy bee improve each shining hour? By making
honey,
of course. But also by prompting scientists to think about the deep
significance of gooey coils that pile up when honey is poured on
toast,
and how quantum mechanics might choreograph the dancing of bees.
Two papers that recently came to light (one in the March issue of
Nature, and the other not yet accepted for publication) celebrated
the
humble honeybee, reminding readers that seemingly trivial problems
can
lead to weighty insights.
In the Nature paper, Dr. Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan, a physicist at
the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, revealed a formula he
discovered
for predicting the frequency at which liquid coils form at the
bottom of
a stream of honey (or a similar fluid). Assisted by experiments
conducted by two Harvard University students, Dr. Mahadevan showed
that
by taking into account the density of the fluid, its viscosity, its
flow
rate, the gravitational force, the radius of the stream and the
height
from which it descends, it is possible to calculate the frequency
and
radius of the resulting coils, at least up to the point at which
they
spread out (and are devoured).
So what?
''At first I was just curious,'' Dr. Mahadevan said in an interview.
''This was one of the few problems that the late fluid dynamicist
Sir
Geoffrey I. Taylor left the rest of us to solve. Taylor made many
great
discoveries, including one he made while working on the first atomic
bomb at Los Alamos. He discovered a way of predicting how the shock
wave
from a nuclear blast would spread out. He also thought about weather
and
climate, about how sperm swims, and many other things involving
fluid
dynamics, but he never got around to solving the honey-coiling
problem.''
Dr. Mahadevan said that the problem seemed too complex to solve when
he
first attacked it three years ago. Instead, he decided to
investigate a
somewhat similar phenomenon: the spontaneous coiling of rope when a
length suspended vertically falls to the ground. His successful
solution
of the rope-coiling problem led to his new formula for honey
coiling.
''As we moved along,'' Dr. Mahadevan said, ''I found that there are
people interested in this: in the glass industry, for instance, in
which
glass fibers must be pulled from melted glass at just the right
speed,
and in the textile industry, in which liquid polymer is pulled
through
small holes to form fibers.''
The investigation of honey coiling is far from complete, he said,
but it
has led to another flavorful field of research: the study of how
sheets
of falling honey (rather than thin streams) behave as they hit the
ground.
''Sheets of viscous fluid do not coil,'' Dr. Mahadevan said. ''They
buckle and fold. The behavior seems to be analogous to the buckling
of
sheets of rock under pressure over geological time periods. The
geological flow of tectonic plates -- the mechanism that creates
mountain ranges -- may be similar in principle to the flow of sheets
of
honey. We'll have to see how it pans out.''
Bees, of course, are interested in honey too, and when a bee finds a
good source of nectar it signals its hive mates where to look. It
does
so by ''dancing.''
Dr. Barbara Shipman, a mathematician at the University of Rochester,
is
the daughter of a physicist who was interested in bees. Early in her
career she became aware that bees returning to their hives do a
stylized, curving ''waggling run'' with their heads pointed toward
food
to guide others in the swarm.
Dr. Shipman's special interest is the geometry of multidimensional
spaces -- spaces that may have many more dimensions than the three
of
everyday experience. While investigating patterns in a theoretical
six-dimensional space (which cannot be visualized), she projected
them
on a two-dimensional plane, and discovered to her surprise that the
resulting curves resembled those that are traced by dancing bees. (A
more easily visualized ''projection'' is that of a three-dimensional
sphere. Projected on a two-dimensional plane, the result is a
circle.)
Physicists have devised various theories based on multidimensional
space
to find hidden relationships between different kinds of fundamental
particles, all of which obey the rules of quantum mechanics. Dr.
Shipman
suspects that quantum mechanics plays a role in biology and
behavior,
and that there might be a link between the mathematics of
six-dimensional space and the innate signaling behavior of bees.
''Lots of physics go on in the bee,'' she said. ''The bee doesn't
know
what it's doing. Its behavior is programmed, not learned from other
bees. Newly born bees do the waggling runs after their first flights
to
find nectar, before ever seeing another bee dance.
''It seems to me natural that quantum mechanics must have some
interaction with biology, which is the most complex of all physical
systems.''
Dr. Shipman has yet to persuade publishers to print the paper
outlining
her ideas, but some physicists, Dr. Roger Penrose of Oxford
University
among them, also believe in connections between quantum events and
biological behavior.
''At least it's worth looking into, don't you think?'' Dr. Shipman
said.
Correction: April 14, 1998, Tuesday
An equation in Science Times last Tuesday for predicting the
frequency
at which honey coils on toast rendered the exponents incorrectly. A
corrected equation appears today on page F5.
Correction: April 14, 1998, Tuesday
An equation last Tuesday for predicting the frequency at which honey
coils on toast rendered the exponents in the formula incorrectly.
The formula is: [omega][wavy hypen]Q(to the 3/2 power)r(to the -7/2
power)[nu](to the -1/2 power)
Or: The frequency of coils is approximately equal to the flow rate
(to
the 3/2 power) times the radius of the filament (to the -7/2 power)
times the kinematic viscosity (to the -1/2/ power).
Correction: April 17, 1998, Friday
A picture in Science Times on April 7 with an article about the
coiling
patterns of liquids like honey carried an incorrect credit. It was
from
Felice Frankel, not Nature.
Holly-B Apiary
P.O.Box 26
Wells,Maine 04090-0026
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