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News ReleaseAdvance Notice of Article to Appear in the NoticesThe Mathematics of Capillary Phenomena Contact At AMS: Tim Goggins (401) 455-4110, FAX (401) 331-3842, tjg@ams.org June 29, 1999 Providence, RI - Imagine a narrow glass test tube partly filled with water. The surface of the liquid will be not flat but curved, as if the liquid were climbing the walls of the tube. This is an example of a capillary surface, a boundary between a liquid and a gas, or between two liquids. The shape of the surface depends on the gravity field and on the properties of the particular materials involved. In the case of a narrow test tube, the shape will be influenced strongly by the presence and by the shape of the solid walls of the tube. Attempts to understand capillary phenomena go back to the time of Aristotle and have resulted in formidable scientific and mathematical challenges. The equations governing these phenomena are highly nonlinear and in general cannot be solved exactly. Further, the theory was difficult to confirm experimentally because capillary action can be masked by interference from other physical phenomena. Recent mathematical discoveries have had an important impact on the study of capillary phenomena. Some of the discoveries led to predictions so surprising as to create doubts about the validity of the underlying physical theory. These doubts have been resolved by the dramatic results of NASA drop tower experiments and also recent experiments conducted on the NASA Space Shuttle and in the Russian Mir Space Station, confirming the predictions. The predictions indicate some ways in which a fuel tank can be designed, so as to make the fuel available in a specified location during space flight. The article, "Capillary Surface Interfaces" by Robert Finn, to appear in the August 1999 issue of the NOTICES of the AMS, describes the history and current state of the mathematical theory of capillary phenomena. Professor Finn may be reached by email at finn@gauss.stanford.edu. |
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