Books such as "Structure in Nature is a Strategy for
Design" (Pearce 1980) have advocated the deployment of the structures that
are encountered in science. Not only does this strike a resonance with the
natural world, but the structures themselves may be in some sense optimal,
for nature always optimises.
One class of such structures is that which derives from the minimisation
of surface energy, and is found in nature everywhere: in bubbles, foams,
emulsions, ecological territories, plant cells (Ball, 2001; Weaire et al.,
1999). They divide up two or three-dimensional space in an optimal way,
with boundaries that are generally curved and meet at equal angles. They
will be our subject here, and we will present some startling artistic
manifestations of them.
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The problem becomes scientifically and
artistically more interesting, when the surfaces trapping the bubble
mono-layer are angled or curved. If appropriate surfaces are chosen, the
patient experimentalist is rewarded with watching beautiful patterns
emerge, which turn out to represent conformal transformations of the
honeycomb under particular circumstances. The only conformal pattern with
translational symmetry (Fig. 2 (a)) has been dubbed "Gravity’s Rainbow".
It’s significance in the field of pattern formation was established by
Rothen’s and Pieranski’s (1996) work on magnetic steel balls subjected to
gravity. Pieranski enjoys an artistic outlook on his work, having created
among other images the one shown in Figure 2 (b) - which predicted the
pattern we found many years later without being aware of his vision. In a
private communication he recently wrote:
"I'm glad that the gravity's rainbow has revealed its secrets to
somebody else. When, by accident, I saw it for the first time emerging
from the chaotic arrangement of tiny steel balls submerged in the magnetic
field, I was taken over by its beauty. […] Find enclosed a primitive
computer graphics I created many years ago [Fig. 2 (b)]. Then, it was just
a vision. Now, you made the vision real."
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In an attempt of finding the optimal packing in three
dimensions scientists are still racing each other, their race horses being
ever faster computers. One of these, saddled with the powerful Surface
Evolver by K. Brakke (1996), brought Weaire and Phelan (1999) 0.2 % ahead
of the to that date unbeaten Kelvin structure (Fig. 3 (a)).
Originally proposed as a building, we have transformed
a section of the Weaire-Phelan structure into a sculpture (Fig. 3 (b)) for
our university campus. Among its many sculptures by famous artists, ours
is going to be the first one made by scientists. Some may like to consider
this a symbolic - if not desperate - outreach…
Modern materials and computers have opened up a wide
vista of opportunities for architects. Rigid rectangularity has
already been replaced by curved or angular forms, although restricted
university budgets may call for simple boxes.
Minimal surfaces and patterns can provide inspiration for new structures
that do not only look natural and appropriate, but satisfy the
requirements of stability by invoking analogies to systems like foams or
plant cells.
In this spirit, the Weaire-Phelan structure has recently left the world
of pure scientific relevance by having become a vital and artistically
stunning ingredient of the architectural design of the "Water Cube" (Fig.
3 (c)) – a magnificent swimming pool for the Olympic Games 2008 in
Beijing, China. This building has a wonderfully ingenious and complex
construction, but still within the overall constraint of a rectangular
building, which perhaps reflects the necessary form of its principal
swimming pool. Future buildings, however, are likely to combine intriguing
internal structures with more expressive external forms. In this process,
scientists should not stand back and admire (or condemn) such designs, but
offer inspiration, suggestions and directions. Fractals, quasicrystals,
catastrophes, minimal forms… Our repertoire is formidable, and remains to
be exploited!
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Figure 3: (a) The Weaire-Phelan structure. (b) Model of
the sculpture for the campus of Trinity College Dublin, originally
proposed as a design for a building. (c) The "Water Cube" swimming centre
for the Olympic Games 2008 in Beijing, China. The Walls are made of the
Weaire-Phelan structure (Image courtesy of ARUP).
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