tfix post - adamsgaard.dk - my academic webpage
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 (HTM) Author: Anders Damsgaard <anders@adamsgaard.dk>
       Date:   Thu, 16 Dec 2021 11:56:24 +0100
       
       fix post
       
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       +<p>Today, <a href="mailto:ineel@alumni.stanford.edu">Indraneel
       +Kasmalkar</a> had his paper published in <a
       +href="https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/19422466">Journal of
       +Geophysical Research: Earth Surface</a>.  Congratulations Neel!  He used
       +my software <a href="https://src.adamsgaard.dk/sphere">sphere</a>, and
       +sheared a granular assembledge with a non-trivial forcing in order to
       +learn more about subglacial sediment behavior.</p>
       +
       +
       +
       +<h2>Abstract</h2>
       +<blockquote>
       +<b>Shear Variation at the Ice-Till Interface Changes the Spatial
       +Distribution of Till Porosity and Meltwater Drainage</b>
       +<br><br>
       +Indraneel Kasmalkar(1), Anders Damsgaard(2), Liran Goren(3), Jenny Suckale(1,4,5)
       +<br><br>
       +1: Department of Computational and Mathematical Engineering, Stanford University, CA, USA
       +<br>
       +2: Department of Geoscience, Aarhus University, Denmark
       +<br>
       +3: Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel
       +<br>
       +4: Department of Geophysics, Stanford University, CA, USA
       +<br>
       +5: Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University, CA, USA
       +<br><br>
       +Plain-language summary:<br>
       +The ice at the base of certain glaciers moves over soft sediments
       +that route meltwater through the pore spaces in between the sediment
       +grains. The ice shears the sediment, but it is not clear if this slow
       +shearing is capable of changing the structure or volume of the pore space,
       +or the path of the meltwater that flows through the sediment. To study
       +the relations between the shearing of the sediment and the changes in its
       +pore space, we use computer simulations that portray the sediment as a
       +collection of closely packed spherical grains, where the pores are filled
       +with meltwater. To shear the simulated sediment, the grains at the top
       +are pushed with fixed speeds in the horizontal direction. Despite the
       +slow shear, which is generally thought of as having no effect on pore
       +space, our results show that shearing changes the sizes of the pores
       +in between the grains, where large pores are formed near the top of the
       +sediment layer. If the grains at the top are pushed with uneven speeds,
       +then the largest pores are formed in the areas where grain speeds vary
       +the most. We show that the exchange of meltwater between neighboring
       +pores is faster than the movement of the grains, indicating that the
       +meltwater can adjust quickly to changing pore space.
       +<br><br>
       +Abstract:<br>
       +Many subglacial environments consist of a fine-grained, deformable
       +sediment bed, known as till, hosting an active hydrological system that
       +routes meltwater. Observations show that the till undergoes substantial
       +shear deformation as a result of the motion of the overlying ice. The
       +deformation of the till, coupled with the dynamics of the hydrological
       +system, is further affected by the substantial strain rate variability
       +in subglacial conditions resulting from spatial heterogeneity at the
       +bed. However, it is not clear if the relatively low magnitudes of strain
       +rates affect the bed structure or its hydrology. We study how laterally
       +varying shear along the ice-bed interface alters sediment porosity and
       +affects the flux of meltwater through the pore spaces. We use a discrete
       +element model consisting of a collection of spherical, elasto-frictional
       +grains with water-saturated pore spaces to simulate the deformation
       +of the granular bed. Our results show that a deforming granular layer
       +exhibits substantial spatial variability in porosity in the pseudo-static
       +shear regime, where shear strain rates are relatively low. In particular,
       +laterally varying shear at the shearing interface creates a narrow zone
       +of elevated porosity which has increased susceptibility to plastic
       +failure. Despite the changes in porosity, our analysis suggests that
       +the pore pressure equilibrates near-instantaneously relative to the
       +deformation at critical state, inhibiting potential strain rate dependence
       +of the deformation caused by bed hardening or weakening resulting from
       +pore pressure changes. We relate shear variation to porosity evolution
       +and drainage element formation in actively deforming subglacial tills.
       +</blockquote>
       +
       +<h2>Links and references:</h2>
       +<ul>
       +        <li><a href="https://doi.org/10.1029/2021JF006460">Publication on journal webpage</a> (closed access)</li>
       +        <li><a href="papers/Kasmalkar et al 2021 Shear variation at the ice-till interface changes the spatial distribution of till porosity and meltwater drainage.pdf">Preprint PDF</a>
       +        <li><a href="https://src.adamsgaard.dk/sphere">Simulation software</a></li>
       +</ul>
 (DIR) diff --git a/pages/013-neel.txt b/pages/013-neel.txt
       t@@ -0,0 +1,83 @@
       +Today, [1]Indraneel Kasmalkar had his paper published in [2]Journal of
       +Geophysical Research: Earth Surface. Congratulations Neel! He used my software
       +[3]sphere, and sheared a granular assembledge with a non-trivial forcing in
       +order to learn more about subglacial sediment behavior.
       +
       +Abstract
       +
       +    Shear Variation at the Ice-Till Interface Changes the Spatial Distribution
       +    of Till Porosity and Meltwater Drainage
       +
       +    Indraneel Kasmalkar(1), Anders Damsgaard(2), Liran Goren(3), Jenny Suckale
       +    (1,4,5)
       +
       +    1: Department of Computational and Mathematical Engineering, Stanford
       +    University, CA, USA
       +    2: Department of Geoscience, Aarhus University, Denmark
       +    3: Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of
       +    the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel
       +    4: Department of Geophysics, Stanford University, CA, USA
       +    5: Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University,
       +    CA, USA
       +
       +    Plain-language summary:
       +    The ice at the base of certain glaciers moves over soft sediments that
       +    route meltwater through the pore spaces in between the sediment grains. The
       +    ice shears the sediment, but it is not clear if this slow shearing is
       +    capable of changing the structure or volume of the pore space, or the path
       +    of the meltwater that flows through the sediment. To study the relations
       +    between the shearing of the sediment and the changes in its pore space, we
       +    use computer simulations that portray the sediment as a collection of
       +    closely packed spherical grains, where the pores are filled with meltwater.
       +    To shear the simulated sediment, the grains at the top are pushed with
       +    fixed speeds in the horizontal direction. Despite the slow shear, which is
       +    generally thought of as having no effect on pore space, our results show
       +    that shearing changes the sizes of the pores in between the grains, where
       +    large pores are formed near the top of the sediment layer. If the grains at
       +    the top are pushed with uneven speeds, then the largest pores are formed in
       +    the areas where grain speeds vary the most. We show that the exchange of
       +    meltwater between neighboring pores is faster than the movement of the
       +    grains, indicating that the meltwater can adjust quickly to changing pore
       +    space.
       +
       +    Abstract:
       +    Many subglacial environments consist of a fine-grained, deformable sediment
       +    bed, known as till, hosting an active hydrological system that routes
       +    meltwater. Observations show that the till undergoes substantial shear
       +    deformation as a result of the motion of the overlying ice. The deformation
       +    of the till, coupled with the dynamics of the hydrological system, is
       +    further affected by the substantial strain rate variability in subglacial
       +    conditions resulting from spatial heterogeneity at the bed. However, it is
       +    not clear if the relatively low magnitudes of strain rates affect the bed
       +    structure or its hydrology. We study how laterally varying shear along the
       +    ice-bed interface alters sediment porosity and affects the flux of
       +    meltwater through the pore spaces. We use a discrete element model
       +    consisting of a collection of spherical, elasto-frictional grains with
       +    water-saturated pore spaces to simulate the deformation of the granular
       +    bed. Our results show that a deforming granular layer exhibits substantial
       +    spatial variability in porosity in the pseudo-static shear regime, where
       +    shear strain rates are relatively low. In particular, laterally varying
       +    shear at the shearing interface creates a narrow zone of elevated porosity
       +    which has increased susceptibility to plastic failure. Despite the changes
       +    in porosity, our analysis suggests that the pore pressure equilibrates
       +    near-instantaneously relative to the deformation at critical state,
       +    inhibiting potential strain rate dependence of the deformation caused by
       +    bed hardening or weakening resulting from pore pressure changes. We relate
       +    shear variation to porosity evolution and drainage element formation in
       +    actively deforming subglacial tills.
       +
       +Links and references:
       +
       +  • [4]Publication on journal webpage (closed access)
       +  • [5]Preprint PDF
       +  • [6]Simulation software
       +
       +
       +References:
       +
       +[1] mailto:ineel@alumni.stanford.edu
       +[2] https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/19422466
       +[3] https://src.adamsgaard.dk/sphere
       +[4] https://doi.org/10.1029/2021JF006460
       +[5] https://adamsgaard.dk/papers/Kasmalkar%20et%20al%202021%20Shear%20variation%20at%20the%20ice-till%20interface%20changes%20the%20spatial%20distribution%20of%20till%20porosity%20and%20meltwater%20drainage.pdf
       +[6] https://src.adamsgaard.dk/sphere