Physicist develops formula for crêpe folding limits

Tom Marzin, a physicist at Cornell University, has created a formula to predict how many times a crêpe or similar flexible material can be folded. The formula hinges on a single number called the elasto-gravity length, balancing gravity and elasticity. He will present the findings on 20 March at the American Physical Society meeting in Denver.

Tom Marzin at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, developed the formula while on holiday in Brittany, France, where crêpes are popular. He observed that folding a tip of a crêpe causes it to flip back, but larger folds stay due to friction and gravity. This behaviour differs from permanent origami folds, involving instead a 'soft or smooth fold' that is 'just a competition between gravity and elasticity', Marzin says. He will present the results on 20 March at a meeting of the American Physical Society in Denver, Colorado. The key metric is the elasto-gravity length, which incorporates the material's density, stiffness and gravity. Computer models showed it governs folding in various scenarios. To verify, Marzin tested plastic discs, store-bought tortillas and crêpes. He made initial crêpes himself but found thickness inconsistent. 'I didn’t control the thickness well,' he says. 'So I asked my mom to perform the experiments over in France. I asked her to buy the callipers and rulers and a bunch of crêpes from a commercial brand. Those were probably made by a machine, [so] that guarantees a good uniform thickness. And she did it really correctly.' The experiments confirmed predictions. For a 26-centimetre diameter crêpe 0.9 millimetres thick, up to four folds are possible. A same-sized 1.5-mm-thick tortilla, with an elasto-gravity length 3.4 times larger, allows only two folds. 'This length captures all the physics underneath,' Marzin says.

Awọn iroyin ti o ni ibatan

Lab scene depicting contactless magnetic friction discovery: hovering metallic blocks with magnetic fields and graphs breaking Amontons' law.
Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

Researchers discover contactless magnetic friction

Ti AI ṣe iroyin Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

Scientists at the University of Konstanz have identified a new type of sliding friction that occurs without physical contact, driven by magnetic interactions. This phenomenon breaks Amontons' law, a 300-year-old physics principle, by showing friction peaks at certain distances rather than increasing steadily with load. The findings appear in Nature Materials.

A viral challenge involves trapping people in a carved-out ice bowl, testing their ability to climb out on a highly slippery surface. An article explains three physics-based methods using frictional forces to overcome the slope. The bowl's spherical shape makes escape increasingly difficult as one ascends.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Researchers at the Indian Institute of Science in Bengaluru have linked Srinivasa Ramanujan's over-a-century-old formulas for pi to contemporary physics, including turbulent fluids and the universe's expansion. Their work, published in Physical Review Letters, reveals unexpected bridges between Ramanujan's intuitive mathematics and conformal field theories. This discovery highlights how pure math can mirror real-world physical phenomena.

Researchers have witnessed a superfluid in graphene halt its motion, transitioning into a supersolid—a quantum phase blending solid-like order with frictionless flow. This breakthrough, achieved in bilayer graphene under specific conditions, challenges long-held assumptions about quantum matter. The findings, published in Nature, mark the first natural observation of such a phase without artificial constraints.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

In 2025, a team led by Zaher Hani at the University of Michigan solved one of David Hilbert's longstanding problems, seamlessly linking the mathematical descriptions of fluids across different scales. This breakthrough connects microscopic particle behavior to macroscopic flows like water in a sink. The achievement draws on techniques from quantum field theory and promises insights into atmospheric and oceanic dynamics.

Scientists have observed a spinning black hole dragging and twisting spacetime around it, confirming a century-old prediction from general relativity. The phenomenon was detected during the destruction of a star by a supermassive black hole. This discovery provides new insights into black hole spins and jet formation.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Researchers at Florida State University have created a novel crystalline material that exhibits complex swirling magnetic behaviors not found in its parent compounds. By blending two structurally mismatched but chemically similar materials, the team induced atomic spins to form skyrmion-like textures. This breakthrough, detailed in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, could advance data storage and quantum technologies.

 

 

 

Ojú-ìwé yìí nlo kuki

A nlo kuki fun itupalẹ lati mu ilọsiwaju wa. Ka ìlànà àṣírí wa fun alaye siwaju sii.
Kọ