Âé¶¹´«Ã½

The rise and fall of nuts

17 November 2001

FOR years physicists have studied the “Brazil nut effect” seen in mixtures of
large and small nuts or beads. When you shake such a mixture, the large ones
rise to the top (Âé¶¹´«Ã½, 24 May 1997, p 25). Researchers thought
that denser beads should rise faster because they have more inertia to carry
them through the smaller grains.

But it turns out that the large beads actually rise more slowly until their
density passes a certain level, report Matthias Möbius and colleagues from
the University of Chicago. Surprisingly, the researchers believe that drag
caused by air in…

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