Plateau's laws
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Plateau's Rules describe the structure of soap films in foams. These rules were formulated in the 19th century by the Belgian physicist Joseph Plateau from his experimental observations.
Plateau's rules state:
- Soap films are made of entire smooth surfaces.
- The average curvature of a portion of a soap film is always constant on any point on the same piece of soap film.
- Soap films always meet in threes, and they do so at an angle of cos−1(−1/2) = 120 degrees forming an edge called a Plateau Border.
- These Plateau Borders meet in fours at an angle of cos−1(−1/3) ≈ 109.47 degrees (the tetrahedral angle) to form a vertex.
Configurations other than those of Plateau's Rules are unstable and the foam will quickly tend to rearrange itself to conform to these rules.