Fragmentation Experiment and Model for Falling Mercury Drops
P.M.C. de Oliveira, C.A.F. Leite, C.V. Chianca, J.S. S\'a Martins and, C.F. Moukarzel

TL;DR
This study investigates the fragmentation of falling mercury drops, confirming a crossover in the size distribution power-law, using experiments with photographic and digital imaging, and a microscopic Ising model simulation.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence of a crossover in fragment size distribution and introduces a microscopic Ising model simulation of the fragmentation process.
Findings
Power-law size distribution for large fragments
Evidence of a crossover to a different power-law for small fragments
Model successfully reproduces the observed crossover
Abstract
The experiment consists of counting and measuring the size of the many fragments observed after the fall of a mercury drop on the floor. The size distribution follows a power-law for large enough fragments. We address the question of a possible crossover to a second, different power-law for small enough fragments. Two series of experiments were performed. The first uses a traditional film photographic camera, and the picture is later treated on a computer in order to count the fragments and classify them according to their sizes. The second uses a modern digital camera. The first approach has the advantage of a better resolution for small fragment sizes. The second, although with a poorer size resolution, is more reliable concerning the counting of all fragments up to its resolution limit. Both together clearly indicate the real existence of the quoted crossover. The model treats the…
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