Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Seeing the S-curve in everything
21 July 2011 [19:40] - Today.Az
From economic trends, population growth, the spread of cancer, or the
adoption of new technology, certain patterns inevitably seem to emerge.
A new technology, for example, begins with slow acceptance, followed by
explosive growth, only to level off before "hitting the wall."
When plotted on graph, this pattern of growth takes the shape of an "S."
While this S-curve has long been recognized by economists and
scientists, a Duke University professor believes that a theory he
developed explains the reason for the prevalence of this particular
pattern, and thus provides a scientific basis for its appearance
throughout nature and the human-made world.
"This phenomenon is so common that it has generated entire fields of
research that seem unrelated -- the spread of biological populations,
chemical reactions, contaminants, languages, information and economic
activity," said Adrian Bejan, engineering professor at Duke's Pratt
School of Engineering. "We have shown that this pattern can be predicted
entirely as a natural flow design."
The concept of flow design, whether it be energy, rivers or human populations, is central to Bejan's theory.
The results of this theory of the S-curve, conducted with
collaborator Sylvie Lorente from the University Toulouse, France, were
published online in the Journal of Applied Physics. The
research was supported by the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Air
Force Office of Scientific Research and the National Renewable Energy
Laboratory.
Bejan's theory, known as the constructal law, is based on the
principle that flow systems evolve their designs over time to facilitate
flow access, reducing and distributing friction or other forms of
resistance. Bejan developed the principle 15 years ago, and has been
using it to describe and predict a wide variety of artificial and
natural phenomena.
The current analysis views this ubiquitous S-curve (also known as the
sigmoid function) as a natural design of flow systems. In the example
of a new technology, after a slow initial acceptance, the rise can be
imagined moving fast through established, though narrow, channels into
the market place. This is the steep upslope of the "S."
As this technology matures, and its penetration slows, any growth, or
flow, moves outward from the initial penetration channels in a shorter
and slower manner. Bejan likes to the use metaphor of fingers stretching
out to represent the initial invasive growth, with the placement of a
glove over those fingers as a representation of the lateral
consolidation phase.
"It's like there are two lives -- the first is long and fast, while
the second phase is short and slow," Bejan said. "The trend begins with a
quick 'invasion,' followed by a 'slower' consolidation. Then the trend
hits a wall."
This pattern matches that of the constructal theory, which uses a
large river basin as a visual description of flow systems, growing fast
and far, with smaller branches growing laterally from the main channels.
"The prevalence of the S-curve phenomena in nature rivals that of the
tree-shaped flows, which also unite the animate, inanimate and human
realms," Bejan said. "This theory shows that this is not a coincidence
-- both are manifestations of the natural constructal tendency of flow
systems to generate evolving designs that allow them to flow, spread and
collect more easily."
/Science Daily/
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