Number 622, January 27,2003
by Phil Schewe, James Riordon, and Ben Stein
Butterflies and Photonic Crystals
In recent years, scientists have discovered that the iridescence of
various colorful creatures, from beetles to birds to butterflies, is
often due to microscopic structures known as photonic crystals. Unlike
pigments, which absorb or reflect certain frequencies of light as a
result of their chemical composition, the way that photonic crystals
reflect light is a function of their physical structure. That is, a
material containing a periodic array of holes or bumps of a certain
size may reflect blue light, for example, and absorb other colors even
though the crystal material itself is entirely colorless. Because a
crystal array looks slightly different from different angles (unlike
pigments, which are the same from any angle), photonic crystals can
lead to shifting shades of iridescent color that may help some animals
attract mates or establish territories.
A collaboration of researchers from Hungary and Belgium (Jean-Pol
Vigneron, Universitaires Notre-Dame de la Paix, Brussels, 011+32-81
724711) may have discovered why the males in certain populations of
lycaenid butterflies carry the striking, photonic crystal coloration,
and males in other lycaenid populations do not. The researchers examined
butterfly scales through high-resolution scanning electron microscopes
(see image), and
confirmed that indeed the colorful butterflies' scales included arrays
of submicron-sized holes that formed natural photonic crystals. Their
closely related brethren from higher elevations did not have the hole
arrays in their scales, and their wings were dull brown rather than
iridescent blue. The difference, it seems, may be due to a question
of survival. The researchers found that the plain brown butterfly wings
warmed much more than the iridescent blue wings when each were exposed
to identical illumination. The researchers believe that the butterflies
at high elevations trade flashy iridescence for light-absorbing brown
so that they can withstand colder temperatures, and survive long enough
to mate.
If photonic crystals can have such a dramatic impact on butterfly
thermal management, suggest the researchers, manmade photonic crystals
may someday provide flexible thermal protection in extreme environments,
possibly being incorporated into such things as space suits or desert
garments. (L. P. Biro et al, Physical
Review E, February 2003)
Synchronization Tomography
A new brain imaging method pioneered by a German research group from
several institutions can now produce images that localize the areas
of the brain involved when test subjects perform physical activities,
and can show how portions of the brain interact with each other. The
technique, dubbed synchronization tomography, involves mapping the fluctuating
magnetic fields produced by tiny electrical currents in the brain, and
determining which brain regions are synchronized with an activity -
such as a test subject's tapping finger. The researchers (Peter
Tass, Institute of Medicine, Research Center, Juelich, 011+49-2461-61-2087)
asked test subjects to tap their finger in time to a rhythmic tone,
and to continue tapping at the same rate after the tone was switched
off. Meanwhile, their brain activity was mapped with a magnetoencephalography
(MEG) machine. The maps showed that the same regions of the brain areas
are active both as people tapped to a beat and as they paced the tapping
themselves, but that the synchronization between the different brain
areas changes dramatically. Other brain imaging methods, including functional
magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and positron emission tomography (PET),
can also provide insight into which regions of the brain are involved
during various activities, but they take too long to acquire images
to disclose how the brain regions interact with each other, and therefore
overlook important details of brain function which are clearly revealed
with synchronization tomography. In addition, a related synchronization
technique may help in the study of rapidly changing signals in the heart
detected with magnetocardiography systems. (P.
A. Tass et al., Physical Review Letters, 28 February
2003)
The Physics of Stone Throwing
Prompted by his son's questions on the subject and the need to furnish
his mechanics textbook with commonplace examples, physicist Lyderic
Bocquet of the Universite Claude Bernard Lyon (France) has investigated
the science behind stone skipping. The chief parameters that determine
whether your stone goes right in or skims across the lake are as follows:
the mass of the stone, its angle with respect to the horizon, its angle
with respect to the water surface (lower is better), its spin rate (more
is generally better, for stability), and its horizontal velocity. Armed
with calculations on energy loss, Bocquet
(33-472-43-2796) has worked out an expression for the maximum number
of skips one can expect. According to Bocquet, the world's record for
stone rebounds is 38. (American
Journal of Physics, February 2003; see also http://lpmcn.univ-lyon1.fr/~lbocquet
)