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Everyday science

Everyday science

Physicists get under the skin of apple growth

09 Oct 2021
Figure depicting the cross-section of apples at different stages of growth
Fruity physics Top: A Gala apple with a cusp where the fruit meets the stalk. Bottom: Apple cross-sections at different stages of the fruit's growth. (Courtesy: Modified from Fig. 1 of A Chakrabarti et al., Nature Physics 17 1125, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41567-021-01335-8. Reused with permission.)

Researchers in the US have used the physics of singularities to study the recess, or cusp, that forms around the stalk of an apple. Based on field and laboratory experiments as well as simulations, they determined that the cusp is self-similar, meaning that it looks the same at different stages of the apple’s growth. They also investigated the emergence of multiple cusps, as are sometimes seen in real fruit.

Singularities are points at which a certain quantity becomes infinite or ill-defined. The infinite space-time curvature thought to exist at the centre of black holes is one well-known example, but singularities also crop up in other areas of physics. In biology, meanwhile, examples include the sharp folds on the surface of the brain and the way bacteria clump together in the presence of certain chemicals.

Move over, Newton

The latest research sees Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan and colleagues at Harvard University explore the singularity created by the abrupt change in the orientation of the apple’s surface at the base of its stalk. In a paper published in Nature Physics, they describe how this singularity develops as the apple grows from a slight bulge in the stem of a blossom into a fully-formed fruit with a seed-containing core, a fleshy cortex surrounding it and a tough outer skin.

To make their observations, Mahadevan and colleagues began by studying the shapes of 100 apples picked at different stages of their growth from the orchard of a college, Peterhouse, at Cambridge University, UK. By slicing each apple in half, they created a series of cross-sections, then arranged them in order as if they were stills from a film depicting the changing shape of a single apple.

The team found that apples measuring less than about 1.5 cm across displayed no discernible cusp, while those with a diameter of more than 3 cm had a distinctive dip at the base of the stalk. This is because in the early stages of the apple’s growth, the contour of the peel varies smoothly. As the cortex starts to expand more quickly than the core, however, a bulge forms away from the core and a discontinuity appears in the apple’s perimeter.

Harvesting data

Next, the researchers analysed the apple’s shape by defining its cross-sectional profile as a one-dimensional curve with a height that depends on both the distance from the stalk and the size of the apple. After generating Taylor expansions of the height and distance variables in terms of the size, they succeeded in expressing the apple’s profile in a self-similar way.

To establish whether real apples also display this self-similarity while approaching a cusp-like singularity, Mahadevan and co-workers rescaled the height and stalk-distance axes using appropriate coefficients and then plotted each apple’s profile. They found, as expected, that the measured profiles all overlapped with one another near the cusp – tracing out what they describe as a “universal curve”.

The researchers went on to confirm this self-similar scaling in three ways. First, they carried out a dynamical analysis on an expanding sphere with its growth restricted at the centre but constant further away. Next, they created a mechanical simulation that treats apples as neo-Hookean materials, meaning their stress-strain curves plateau as they grow. Lastly, they performed experiments using artificial apples made from polymer spheres that swelled when immersed in hexane. By using a second, un-swellable polymer to represent the stalk, they found that a cusp formed within an hour of immersion in the solvent.

On the cusp of greatness

As a final step, the researchers investigated apples with multiple cusps, each of which creates a separate groove on the fruit’s upper surface. Using simulations, they showed that the quantity of cusps depends both on the number of carpels – that is, the apple blossom’s seed-bearing structures – and the ratio of the apple’s diameter to the diameter of its stalk. They confirmed this diameter-ratio dependence in further experiments with the polymer spheres, and they claim that it is also present in their data from real apples.

Mahadevan says that the research was prompted by simple curiosity, rather than any practical end. But he argues that by quantifying apple growth, he and his colleagues have sharpened some outstanding questions – including why the region near the stalk grows more slowly and what biochemical processes are involved. “This will hopefully give us a still deeper view of how nature works,” he says.

Jens Eggers of Bristol University in the UK is enthusiastic about the research but questions whether the Harvard models fully agree with the field data. In particular, he says, it is not completely clear whether the results from real apples show a correlation between cusp number and diameter ratio.

But, he adds, extracting quantitative, testable results from biological data is not easy. “By this measure the paper is doing quite well,” he says.

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