Abstract

Ripples arise at edges of petals of blooming Lilium casablanca flowers and at edges of torn plastic sheets. In both systems, ripples are a consequence of excess length along the edge of a sheet. Through the use of time-lapse videos of blooming lilies and published images of torn plastic sheets, we find that ripples in both systems are well described by the scaling relationship a∝w(L−w), where a is amplitude, w is wavelength, and L is arc length. A phenomenological relationship previously reported for self-similar ripple patterns, namely ⟨a⟩∝⟨w⟩, can be recovered by assuming that buckling stress is constant. Excess length along petal edges can also influence their overall Gaussian curvature, such that petals invert from a cup shape to a saddle shape upon blooming. Previous simulations of these shape changes have assumed that petal thickness decreases at least quadratically. Here, we evaluate tomograms of several varieties of lily buds and find that this assumption is valid along the short axis of the buds, but not the long axis. A challenge of employing traditional tomography methods to measure petal thickness is that the sample is destroyed; a single bud cannot be followed through the entire blooming process. To address this challenge, we provide proof of principle that the nondestructive, label-free method of x-ray tomography produces high-contrast three-dimensional scans on time scales short enough to follow lily blooming.

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