用隐形斗篷避开地震波

来源:百度文库 编辑:神马文学网 时间:2024/04/30 00:23:59
地震波主要分为两种,一种是表面波,一种是体波。表面波只在地表传递,体波能穿越地球内部,其中表面波对地表建筑物造成的危害最大。因此利物浦大学的研究人员提出了一种设想,用一种能转移表面波的隐形斗篷(中文),来保护建筑物不受伤害。 利物浦大学数学系的Sebastien Guenneau博士解释称,他们可以将“斗篷”调整到不同的入射波频率,引导建筑物外面的表面波,在通过建筑物后再让它恢复到原样,继续以同样的强度向后传播,这相当于将风险转嫁到其它地区。Guenneau博士表示这项研究是为了保护人口稠密的地区,拯救更多生命。研究人员正在进行小规模试验。   

'Invisibility cloak' could protect against earthquakes

July 20th, 2009

Research at the University of Liverpool has shown it is possible to develop an 'invisibility cloak' to protect buildings from earthquakes.

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The seismic waves produced by earthquakes include body waves which travel through the earth and surface waves which travel across it. The new technology controls the path of surface waves which are the most damaging and responsible for much of the destruction which follows earthquakes.

The technology involves the use of concentric rings of plastic which could be fitted to the Earth's surface to divert surface waves. By controlling the stiffness and elasticity of the rings, waves travelling through the 'cloak' pass smoothly into the material and are compressed into small fluctuations in pressure and density. The path of the surface waves can be made into an arc that directs the waves outside the protective cloak. The technique could be applied to buildings by installing the rings into foundations.

Sebastien Guenneau, from the University's Department of Mathematics, who developed the technology with Stefan Enoch and Mohamed Farhat from the Fresnel Institute (CNRS) in Marseilles, France, explained: "We are able to 'tune' the cloak to the differing frequencies of incoming waves which means we can divert waves of a variety of frequencies. For each small frequency range, there is a pair of rings which does most of the work and these move about a lot - bending up and down - when they are hit by a wave at their frequency.

"The waves are then directed outside the cloak where they return to their previous size. The cloak does not reflect waves - they continue to travel behind it with the same intensity. At this stage, therefore, we can only transfer the risk from one area to another, rather than eliminate it completely."

He added: "This work has enormous potential in offering protection for densely populated areas of the world at risk from earthquakes. The challenge now is to turn our theories into real applications that can save lives - small scale experiments are underway."

Seismic waves also include coupled pressure and shear body waves which are less destructive than surface waves. Sebastien Guenneau and Sasha Movchan at the University of Liverpool, together with Michele Brun at Cagliari University, have designed an 'elastic' cloak to protect against these particularseismic waves and the team is currently seeking a suitable material to accommodate the elastic parameters of the cloak.

The new research to protect against earthquakes is published in Applied Physics Letters and Physical Review Letters.

Source: University of Liverpool (news : web)