In a wildfire, a burst of embers lofted upward can travel far, starting a new spot fire when they land. Although large ember bursts only happen occasionally, researchers found that these events — with orders of magnitude more embers than usual — play an outsized role in wildfire spread. In their experiments, researchers observed a bonfire with high-speed cameras to track ember bursts, and they also collected fallen embers from around their fire. They found large (>1 mm) embers could travel much further than current fire models predicted, carried by rare but powerful updrafts that coincided with large bursts. Their work indicates that wildfire models need a better way to simulate these kinds of events that are far from the fire’s baseline state but which occur often enough and with enough impact that they can spread fires. (Image credit: C. Cook; research credit: A. Peterson and T. Banerjee; via Physics World)
Celebrating the physics of all that flows