May 12, 2000 -- The forms
of flames on Earth are familiar to everyone. We all know what
a burning match, candle, fireplace or blowtorch look like --
or a burning building, or rocket ignition blast. The presence
of gravity and the effects of air or gas movement, plus the type
of fuel and oxidant, determine everything from a flame's shape
and temperature to burn rate, burn pattern, soot production and
deposition and how fast it will or won't be extinguished.
"But in the microgravity of space, we are not dealing with
just another old familiar flame," says Dr. Vedha Nayagam
of NASA's National Center for Microgravity Research on Fluids
and Combustion at the Glenn Research Center (GRC) in Cleveland,
OH, where the nature of combustion in space is being studied
intently by teams of scientists.
Above: On Earth, gravity-driven buoyant convection causes
a candle flame to be teardrop-shaped (A) and carries soot to
the flame's tip, making it yellow. In microgravity, where convective
flows are absent, the flame is spherical, soot-free, and blue
(B). [more
information]
"The tall spear-shaped flame on a candle, or the
"roaring hearth" look of bonfire-type flames, or the
forced-air look of a rocket or furnace flame are very different
indeed in the absence of gravity," Dr. Nayagam states. "Soot
production, burning rates, completeness of combustion, exhaust
products and other characteristics all change radically in space.
"The absence of gravity's effects on convection aboard the
Space Shuttle, a space station or other space vehicle makes flames
behave in ways that can be either beneficial -- as a test bed
for research -- or very dangerous in the case of a fire in materials,
chemicals or electrical devices. It is vital to know what makes
flames start and stop in low gravity, and how flames behave while
burning. The safety of NASA's space crews and vehicles can depend
on our knowledge of combustion in space."
Watching the Flame Go 'Round
Recently, Dr. Nayagam and Dr. Forman Williams of the University
of California at San Diego, a co-investigator in NASA/GRC's microgravity
combustion science program, came upon some startling discoveries
about flames on Earth that could help scientists understand how
flames behave in microgravity.
Nayagam and Williams
ignited a plastic disk a little bigger than a CD with a blowtorch
and then spun it slowly (2 to 20 revolutions per second) in still
air. They expected to see flames burning as a horizontal disk.
Instead, the flame burned in a flat spiral pattern, with the
spiral moving in the direction opposite to the disk's spin. As
the flames lessened their tips exhibited a strange meandering
motion from side to side.
Right: Flames on top of a disk slowly spinning in a clockwise
direction burn in a spiral headed counterclockwise. Vedha Nayagam
and Forman Williams are studying this phenomenon, which occurs
both on Earth and in microgravity, in the hopes of fully explaining
the pattern with basic physics principles.
Starting a fire at the center of a still disk is like
dropping a stone in a quiet pond, says Nayagam. It produces a
flame front that moves outward in a circle, fading as the fuel
(the disk) is consumed. If you spin the disk, then the circular
disk flames become spiral flames under some conditions.
"Under slow spin conditions ... just before circular
flames extinguish, [the flames] break symmetry -- and spirals
appear in the center hole of the flames and propagate outwards
in a spiral instead of in a circular wave front," he explained.
"Spiral burning could be common
in the slow, swirling flows that we can establish in a microgravity
environment -- but these results were very unexpected in normal
Earth gravity," added Dr. Williams. "We plan to explore
further what causes the spiral flame pattern, and what causes
the tips to follow a [chaotic] meandering path."
Left: At NASA's Johnson Space Center, there is a microgravity
research aircraft nicknamed the "Vomit
Comet" used to fly parabolas
to investigate the effects of "zero" gravity. The KC-135,
typically used by the USAF for aerial refueling, is the military
version of the venerable Boeing 707airliner.
Nayagam says it's an advantage to be able to generate these
flames in the lab under normal gravity, where it is easier and
less expensive to study them than on the Space Shuttle. The investigators
plan to conduct further tests with spiral flames on board the
Johnson Space Flight Center's KC-135, which can create brief
microgravity conditions in parabolic flight.
Why Set A Spinning Disk On Fire?
Spirals, Spirals, everywhere....
There
are many spiral forms in nature, both on Earth and in space.
Spirals occur in physical forms such as DNA and the shell formation
of mollusks such as the conch and chambered nautilus. They also
occur in wind patterns, including hurricanes and tornadoes. They
are present in air and flame forms known as vortexes and whorls.
And
they occur in the way things fall in the atmosphere, from leaves
to aircraft. In the human body, the spiral pattern of the
heart's bioelectric impulses causes the chambers to beat
with a spiral pulsing rhythm. Brain waves, comprised of neuron
impulses, seem to flow along the neurons and down the spinal
cord in a spiral pattern. Some evidence shows bioelectrical spiraling
in the labor impulses during
birth. Finally, we see spiral forms omnipresent throughout the
visible and invisible universe, in galaxies, accretion disks
around black holes, coalescing interstellar clouds and many other
forms of matter and energy.
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"We need to discover how and why flames propagate
in microgravity, and under what conditions flame propagation
changes. Hopefully the studies will also explain turbulent combustion,
as the swirling flow is vital to understanding the phenomenon
called fire whorl," says Dr. Nayagam.
"Understanding these surprising phenomenon may enable
scientists to predict flame extinction and to help mitigate fire
risks on Earth and in microgravity," states Dr. Nayagam.
"The initial and on-going basic reason for NASA's combustion
studies is to learn about spacecraft fire safety. We need to
answer questions such as: what is the worst condition for fire
in a microgravity environment, and under what conditions a fire
will increase its burn rate or be extinguished. Our goals include
learning under what conditions materials in a spacecraft will
or won't support fire."
"The bottom line," Dr. Nayagam says, "is that
this simple system of flames on a spinning disk under variable
controlled conditions illustrates more complex systems on Earth,
in spacecraft, and in the human body."
Readers can learn more about flames in space at the Microgravity
Combustion Research home page. |