loading page

Barchan-barchan repulsion investigated at the grain scale
  • +1
  • Nicolao C Lima,
  • Willian Righi Assis,
  • Carlos Azael Alvarez,
  • Erick Franklin
Nicolao C Lima
Unicamp
Author Profile
Willian Righi Assis
UNICAMP - University of Campinas
Author Profile
Carlos Azael Alvarez
UNICAMP - University of Campinas
Author Profile
Erick Franklin
UNICAMP - University of Campinas

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

Author Profile

Abstract

Barchans are dunes of crescent shape found on Earth, Mars and other celestial bodies. Among the different types of barchan-barchan interaction, there is one, known as chasing, in which the dunes remain close but without touching each other. In this paper, we investigate the origins of this barchan-barchan repulsion by carrying out grain-scale numerical computations in which a pair of granular heaps is deformed by the fluid flow into barchan dunes that interact with each other. In our simulations, data such as position, velocity and resultant force are computed for each individual particle at each time step, allowing us to measure details of both the fluid and grains that explain the repulsion. We show the trajectories of grains, time-average resultant forces, and mass balances for each dune, and that the downstream barchan shrinks faster than the upstream one, keeping, thus, a relatively high velocity although in the wake of the upstream barchan. In its turn, this fast shrinkage is caused by the flow disturbance, which induces higher erosion on the downstream barchan and its circumvention by grains leaving the upstream dune. Our results help explaining the mechanisms behind the distribution of barchans in dune fields found on Earth and Mars.
09 Apr 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive
12 Apr 2024Published in ESS Open Archive