How to push, wiggle, or drill an object through granular material

Pushing a shovel through snow, planting an umbrella on the beach, wading through a ball pit, and driving over gravel all have one thing in common: They all are exercises in intrusion, with an intruding object exerting some force to move through a soft and granular material. Predicting what it takes to push through sand, gravel, or other soft media can help engineers drive a rover over Martian soil, anchor a ship in rough seas, and walk a robot through sand and mud. But modeling the forces involved in such processes is a huge computational challenge that often takes days to weeks to solve. Now, engineers at the Massachusette Institute of Technology and Georgia Tech have found a faster and simpler way to model intrusion through any soft, flowable material. Daniel Goldman, Dunn Family Professor in the School of Physics, joined MIT researchers for this project. 

created: 
1674491266
Author: 
Renay San Miguel
hgId: 
664986
gmt_created: 
2023-01-23 16:27:46
Publication: 
How to push, wiggle, or drill an object through granular material
Article URL drupal link: 
Article URL: 
https://news.mit.edu/2023/soft-push-granular-intrusion-0119
changed: 
1674491266
gmt_changed: 
2023-01-23 16:27:46