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Galileo's Square Cube Law - Colorado Association of Science ...

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Galileo’s <strong>Square</strong> <strong>Cube</strong> <strong>Law</strong><br />

&<br />

Why Size Matters<br />

National <strong>Science</strong> Teachers <strong>Association</strong> Conferences<br />

Minneapolis - Nov. 30 th 2009 Phoenix - Dec. 5 th 2009<br />

<strong>Colorado</strong> <strong>Science</strong> Conference<br />

Denver - Nov. 19 th 2010


The New <strong>Science</strong><br />

• In 1638 Galileo published<br />

Two New <strong>Science</strong>s.<br />

• Because the ratio between<br />

area and volume changes<br />

with size, size matters.<br />

• Galileo’s <strong>Square</strong>-<strong>Cube</strong> <strong>Law</strong><br />

is one <strong>of</strong> the most<br />

fundamental concepts in<br />

all <strong>of</strong> science.


<strong>Science</strong> Gone Wrong<br />

• Yet 3 & ½ centuries later<br />

Galileo’s <strong>Square</strong>-<strong>Cube</strong><br />

<strong>Law</strong> is still being left out<br />

<strong>of</strong> science education.<br />

• Consequently most<br />

everyone is still unsure if<br />

size matters.


Does Size<br />

Matter?<br />

•It is a major failure <strong>of</strong> science<br />

education that our society is<br />

ignorant regarding this extremely<br />

fundamental scientific question.


Misleading Experts<br />

• Giant dinosaurs and pterosaurs appear to<br />

conflict with Galileo’s <strong>Square</strong>-<strong>Cube</strong> <strong>Law</strong><br />

showing that size matters.<br />

• Either 1) Galileo’s <strong>Square</strong>-<strong>Cube</strong> <strong>Law</strong> is<br />

wrong or<br />

• 2) the paleontologists claiming that there<br />

is nothing odd about giant dinosaurs and<br />

pterosaurs are wrong.


The evidence supporting Galileo’s<br />

<strong>Square</strong>-<strong>Cube</strong> <strong>Law</strong> is overwhelming.<br />

• Problem: The ‘experts’ are never<br />

going to admit to being wrong.<br />

• <strong>Science</strong> educators have an<br />

obligation to be leaders in<br />

determine what is good science.


What is Galileo’s<br />

<strong>Square</strong>-<strong>Cube</strong> <strong>Law</strong><br />

• The area is the<br />

square <strong>of</strong> the length<br />

multiplier.<br />

• The volume is the<br />

cube <strong>of</strong> the length<br />

multiplier.<br />

• Changing the size<br />

changes the ratio <strong>of</strong><br />

area to volume.<br />

Height<br />

Depth<br />

Width


Scaling Example <strong>of</strong> <strong>Square</strong>-<strong>Cube</strong> <strong>Law</strong><br />

• If kite B is three times<br />

taller than kite A.<br />

• Then kite B has nine<br />

times the surface area <strong>of</strong><br />

kite A; yet it weights 27<br />

times more than kite A.<br />

• Will kite B fly if its<br />

weight to area ratio is<br />

three times greater?<br />

Kite A<br />

Kite B


Larger flying objects require<br />

disproportional greater power.<br />

Applies to planes, helicopters, birds, and<br />

other flying animals.


Consequences <strong>of</strong><br />

Scaling are not<br />

Always Obvious.<br />

• Simple objects may still work when they<br />

are scaled up or down.<br />

• Yet complicated objects such as flying<br />

machines and biological objects will<br />

usually fail if their size is outside their<br />

normal narrow range.


Consequence <strong>of</strong><br />

being ignorant <strong>of</strong><br />

the Galileo’s<br />

<strong>Square</strong>-<strong>Cube</strong> <strong>Law</strong>.


Galileo’s <strong>Square</strong>-<strong>Cube</strong> <strong>Law</strong> Applies<br />

to All <strong>Science</strong> Disciplines<br />

• Aerodynamics<br />

• Biology<br />

• Nanotechnology<br />

• Astronomy<br />

• Physics<br />

• Chemistry


Smaller objects<br />

have more<br />

exposed area.<br />

• Small grains,<br />

powders, gives us<br />

the c<strong>of</strong>fee that we<br />

want FAST!<br />

• The small sticks<br />

exposed more wood<br />

at the surface for<br />

burning.


Rate <strong>of</strong> Heat Transfer<br />

• Food with large areas compared to their volume<br />

cooked in only a few minutes.<br />

• Food with a large volume compared to its surface<br />

area require a few hours in the oven.


Larger Size Objects have:<br />

• Greater difficulty achieving flight<br />

• Greater stress so large objects are<br />

more likely to break<br />

• Slower chemical reactions.<br />

• Lower heat transfer.


Galileo’s <strong>Square</strong>-<strong>Cube</strong> <strong>Law</strong> is fundamental<br />

to understanding biology.


Diffusion Rates / Cell Division<br />

• Cells need a high surface<br />

area to volume ratio to<br />

be efficient in passing<br />

food and waste across<br />

the cell membrane.<br />

• Larger cells have a lower<br />

surface area to volume<br />

ratio.<br />

• So cells divide rather<br />

than grow larger.


Stress & Bad Health <strong>of</strong> Giants<br />

• Stress on Robert<br />

Wadlow’s legs is about<br />

twice that <strong>of</strong> the girls.<br />

• Likewise his difference in<br />

blood pressure with<br />

height is about twice that<br />

<strong>of</strong> the girls.<br />

• Giants and overweight<br />

people tend to suffer<br />

numerous health<br />

problems.


Something has got to give!<br />

• If you double the size <strong>of</strong><br />

an animal then<br />

• 1) Weight is eight times<br />

greater while<br />

• 2) Supporting area is<br />

only four times greater.<br />

• Stress is twice as much<br />

and so the legs are more<br />

likely to break.


Larger Animals are More Likely to<br />

Break Bones<br />

• Small animals can fall great heights without harm.<br />

• Conversely, horses <strong>of</strong>ten break their bones while simply<br />

running a race.


• Elephant has the greatest absolute<br />

strength yet the least amount <strong>of</strong><br />

relative strength.<br />

• The smallest animals have the<br />

greatest relative strength.<br />

• Rhinoceros beetle can lift 850<br />

times its own weight.<br />

Strongest Animal:<br />

Absolute Strength<br />

and Relative<br />

Strength.


Relative Power Effects How Birds Fly<br />

• The humming bird has so much relative<br />

power that it can hover and even the fly<br />

backwards.<br />

• The largest birds <strong>of</strong>ten need rising air<br />

thermals to assist them with their flight.


When birds get too large they can<br />

no longer fly


Relative Power<br />

& Metabolism<br />

• Heaviest flying bird = 25 pounds.<br />

• Heaviest bat = 2.5 pounds.<br />

• There are no modern day flying reptiles.<br />

• Reason: birds have greater relative power<br />

• 1) superior circulating respiratory system,<br />

• 2) higher body temperature.


Smaller Mammals have<br />

Greater Heat Lost<br />

• Small mammals have to eat<br />

constantly to replace their lost<br />

thermal energy.<br />

• A five ton elephant will eat<br />

about 130 kg <strong>of</strong> food per day<br />

• Five tons <strong>of</strong> mice will eat 720<br />

kg <strong>of</strong> food per day.


Humans<br />

change their<br />

shape as they<br />

grow<br />

• As warm-blooded animals grow the surface to<br />

volume ratio decreases.<br />

• Effects the rate <strong>of</strong> heat transfer.<br />

• Babies have more rounded features and<br />

disproportionally large heads.


Larger Animals have:<br />

• Lower relative muscle strength<br />

• Greater stress on their bones so their<br />

bones are more likely to break<br />

• Less relative heat lost so larger animals<br />

eat proportionally less food<br />

• Lower heart rate.


The Biology Revolution<br />

• The new biology requires a foundation in<br />

mathematics and physics.<br />

• Education reform: physics first.<br />

• No real understanding until you write an<br />

equation or make a hypothesis.<br />

• Simply because something is alive does<br />

not excluded it from the laws <strong>of</strong> physics.


Size & Heart Rate<br />

• Smallest animals have<br />

much higher heart rates.<br />

• Mouse: 500 beats/min<br />

• Human: 70 beats /min<br />

• Elephant: 28 beats / min<br />

• Heart rate to body mass:<br />

R = (K m) -1/4 .


Biological Clock<br />

• Cells are like engines: their metabolism rate is<br />

directly related to the food and oxygen supply.<br />

• Circulating system <strong>of</strong> smaller systems delivers<br />

food and oxygen to cells at a higher rate.<br />

• Lifespan is about a trillion heart beats.


Further Reading<br />

• Scaling: the Physics <strong>of</strong> Lilliput - Morrison<br />

• A Matter <strong>of</strong> Scale - Ge<strong>of</strong>frey West<br />

• Scaling: Why Giants Don’t Exist - Fowler<br />

• On being the Right Size - J. B. S. Haldane<br />

• DinosaurTheory.com – David Esker


End <strong>of</strong> Presentation on<br />

Galileo’s <strong>Square</strong>-<strong>Cube</strong> <strong>Law</strong><br />

Thank you<br />

David Esker

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