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							| @ -23,11 +23,12 @@ | |||||||
| 
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| \title{How many acres of potatoes does a society need?}  | \title{How many acres of potatoes does a society need?}  | ||||||
| \shorttitle{How Many Potatoes?} | \shorttitle{How Many Potatoes?} | ||||||
| \leftheader{Moore} | %\leftheader{Moore} | ||||||
|  | \leftheader{} | ||||||
| %IOP header | %IOP header | ||||||
| \title{How many acres of potatoes does a society need? Using food and historical claims to introduce energy.} | \title{How many acres of potatoes does a society need? Using food and historical claims to introduce energy.} | ||||||
| \author{Nathan T. Moore} | %\author{Nathan T. Moore} | ||||||
| \affiliation{Department of Physics, Winona State University, Winona, MN 55987, USA} | %\affiliation{Department of Physics, Winona State University, Winona, MN 55987, USA} | ||||||
| %\email{nmoore@winona.edu} | %\email{nmoore@winona.edu} | ||||||
| \date{\today} | \date{\today} | ||||||
| 
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| @ -42,7 +43,9 @@ Science and Social Policy classes are full of bespoke units and involve many dif | |||||||
| \section{Introduction} | \section{Introduction} | ||||||
| When the United States entered World War One one of the problems they faced was logistics.  How much food do you need to ship overseas to Europe to feed a million soldiers?  That early work in nutrition led to the $3000$ Calorie diet many people remember from secondary Health Education class.  A bit about ``Calorie'' (uppercase) vs ``calorie'' (lowercase) units you might remember: $1~Calorie = 1~kilocalorie=1 kcal$, and a dietitian might build a $3000 kcal$ diet for a 20 year old basketball player. $One~ calorie = 0.001kcal$, the amount of energy it takes  to heat a gram of water by a degree Celsius.  There are about $4.2$ Joules in a single calorie, and a Joule occurs all over introductory  physics.  If you need to buy a new home furnace, the sales brochure might advertise that it is capable of delivering $100,000$ BTU's of heat each hour.  What's a BTU? Heat a pound of water by $1^{\circ}F$.  Of course Heat Pumps are far more efficient than simply burning methane or propane, but they consume kilo-watt-hours (kWh) of electricity, not BTU's.  What's a kWh?  Run a $1000$ Watt toaster for an hour and you'll have pulled one kWh off the grid, it will cost you about $\$0.13$ in Minnesota.  If you decide to put solar panels in your backyard, they will probably collect about $10\%$ of the $3.5kWh$ the  the sun delivers to each square meter of your lawn (in Minnesota) each day.   | When the United States entered World War One one of the problems they faced was logistics.  How much food do you need to ship overseas to Europe to feed a million soldiers?  That early work in nutrition led to the $3000$ Calorie diet many people remember from secondary Health Education class.  A bit about ``Calorie'' (uppercase) vs ``calorie'' (lowercase) units you might remember: $1~Calorie = 1~kilocalorie=1 kcal$, and a dietitian might build a $3000 kcal$ diet for a 20 year old basketball player. $One~ calorie = 0.001kcal$, the amount of energy it takes  to heat a gram of water by a degree Celsius.  There are about $4.2$ Joules in a single calorie, and a Joule occurs all over introductory  physics.  If you need to buy a new home furnace, the sales brochure might advertise that it is capable of delivering $100,000$ BTU's of heat each hour.  What's a BTU? Heat a pound of water by $1^{\circ}F$.  Of course Heat Pumps are far more efficient than simply burning methane or propane, but they consume kilo-watt-hours (kWh) of electricity, not BTU's.  What's a kWh?  Run a $1000$ Watt toaster for an hour and you'll have pulled one kWh off the grid, it will cost you about $\$0.13$ in Minnesota.  If you decide to put solar panels in your backyard, they will probably collect about $10\%$ of the $3.5kWh$ the  the sun delivers to each square meter of your lawn (in Minnesota) each day.   | ||||||
| 
 | 
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| As the previous paragraph illustrates, there are a frustratingly large number of different units in an ``Energy'' class.  At Winona  | As the previous paragraph illustrates, there are a frustratingly large number of different units in an ``Energy'' class.  At  | ||||||
|  | XXXX | ||||||
|  | %Winona  | ||||||
| State, this 3 credit class fulfills a ``Science and Social Policy'' general education requirement and is taken by students from across the university.   Lots of college majors don't require a math class beyond algebra or introductory statistics and the population is largely math-averse. You could jokingly say that one of the main things students learn in the class is unit conversion, but it isn't far off.  Nearly every field finds energy a useful representation, and every profession has their own set of units and terminology most well suited for quick calculation.  Would a medical lab scientist talk about the fractional acre-foot of urine needed test kidney function?  No, but someone in the central valley of California would certainly care about the acre-feet of water necessary to grow almonds!  Does a gas station price their gasoline in dollars per kWh? Given the growing electrification of cars, they might soon. | State, this 3 credit class fulfills a ``Science and Social Policy'' general education requirement and is taken by students from across the university.   Lots of college majors don't require a math class beyond algebra or introductory statistics and the population is largely math-averse. You could jokingly say that one of the main things students learn in the class is unit conversion, but it isn't far off.  Nearly every field finds energy a useful representation, and every profession has their own set of units and terminology most well suited for quick calculation.  Would a medical lab scientist talk about the fractional acre-foot of urine needed test kidney function?  No, but someone in the central valley of California would certainly care about the acre-feet of water necessary to grow almonds!  Does a gas station price their gasoline in dollars per kWh? Given the growing electrification of cars, they might soon. | ||||||
| 
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| Everyone eats, maybe not $3000 kcals$ per day, but at least something every day.  When I teach our energy class, (Kraushaar et al., 2022; Muller, 2010), | Everyone eats, maybe not $3000 kcals$ per day, but at least something every day.  When I teach our energy class, (Kraushaar et al., 2022; Muller, 2010), | ||||||
| @ -56,7 +59,9 @@ To introduce Food Energy, I ask the students to work through a few questions: | |||||||
| \centering | \centering | ||||||
| \includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{at_the_buffet.jpg} | \includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{at_the_buffet.jpg} | ||||||
| \caption{ | \caption{ | ||||||
| A proto-college-student at Winona's  | A proto-college-student at  | ||||||
|  | XXXX's | ||||||
|  | %Winona's  | ||||||
| China King Buffet, dreaming about visiting the steam tables every day.  | China King Buffet, dreaming about visiting the steam tables every day.  | ||||||
| } | } | ||||||
| \label{buffet} | \label{buffet} | ||||||
| @ -100,7 +105,9 @@ In medicine, these slopes known as ``Metabolic Equivalent of Task'' (METS), a co | |||||||
| 
 | 
 | ||||||
| \subsection{Burning off food energy} | \subsection{Burning off food energy} | ||||||
| Imagine that after eating a $600kcal$ bacon-maple long-john (donut), you decide to go for a hike to ``work off'' the Calories.   | Imagine that after eating a $600kcal$ bacon-maple long-john (donut), you decide to go for a hike to ``work off'' the Calories.   | ||||||
| Winona State  is in a river valley bounded by $200m$ tall bluffs.  How high up the bluff would you have to hike to burn off the donut?   | %Winona  | ||||||
|  | XXXX | ||||||
|  | State  is in a river valley bounded by $200m$ tall bluffs.  How high up the bluff would you have to hike to burn off the donut?   | ||||||
| Useful information: human muscle is about $1/3$ efficient, and on Earth's surface, gravitational energy has a slope of about $10~\frac{Joules}{kg\cdot m}$. | Useful information: human muscle is about $1/3$ efficient, and on Earth's surface, gravitational energy has a slope of about $10~\frac{Joules}{kg\cdot m}$. | ||||||
| 
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| \begin{figure}[h] | \begin{figure}[h] | ||||||
| @ -140,7 +147,7 @@ As figures \ref{corn_and_potato_yields} and \ref{ag_yields} show, the epoch of ` | |||||||
| \includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{corn_potatoes_raw_production_per_acre.pdf} | \includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{corn_potatoes_raw_production_per_acre.pdf} | ||||||
| \caption{ | \caption{ | ||||||
| USDA per acre Corn and Potato production figures, plotted over time.  Data is given in harvest units, $56lbs$ bushels per acre for field corn and hundred-weight (CWT) for potatoes.  By mass, corn is about $4.5$ times more calorie dense than potato which results in a nearly equal $kcal/acre$ values for both crops in figure \ref{ag_yields}. | USDA per acre Corn and Potato production figures, plotted over time.  Data is given in harvest units, $56lbs$ bushels per acre for field corn and hundred-weight (CWT) for potatoes.  By mass, corn is about $4.5$ times more calorie dense than potato which results in a nearly equal $kcal/acre$ values for both crops in figure \ref{ag_yields}. | ||||||
| Details on the data source and conversions are given in \ref{how_yield_plot_is_made}. | %Details on the data source and conversions are given in \ref{how_yield_plot_is_made}. | ||||||
| } | } | ||||||
| \label{corn_and_potato_yields} | \label{corn_and_potato_yields} | ||||||
| \end{figure} | \end{figure} | ||||||
| @ -178,14 +185,13 @@ If we over-estimate and produce food for the entire year, the family will need a | |||||||
| \be | \be | ||||||
| 4~people\cdot\frac{3000kcal}{person\cdot day}\cdot\frac{365~days}{year} \approx 4.4 M kcal .  | 4~people\cdot\frac{3000kcal}{person\cdot day}\cdot\frac{365~days}{year} \approx 4.4 M kcal .  | ||||||
| \ee | \ee | ||||||
| A brief aside for those bored by the simplistic unit conversion: when I ask students to solve problems like these, one undercurrent of conversation is ``Should I divide by 365 or multiply?''  Particularly with online homework systems, checking your answer for reasonability isn't  typically graded. Asking the students to reason proportionally with units is a skill that can give meaning to numbers.  | %A brief aside for those bored by the simplistic unit conversion: when I ask students to solve problems like these, one undercurrent of conversation is ``Should I divide by 365 or multiply?''  Particularly with online homework systems, checking your answer for reasonability isn't  typically graded. Asking the students to reason proportionally with units is a skill that can give meaning to numbers.  | ||||||
| 
 | From figure \ref{1917_yields} we can estimate $1.9~million~kcals$ per acre of potato production.   | ||||||
| From figure \ref{1917_yields} we can estimate $1.9~million~kcals$ per acre of potato production.  Again the students might ask, should I multiple $4.4$ and $1.9$ or should I divide them?  It can be useful in a class discussion to have the students discuss and vote which of the following two forms will give the meaningful answer. | %Again the students might ask, should I multiple $4.4$ and $1.9$ or should I divide them?  It can be useful in a class discussion to have the students discuss and vote which of the following two forms will give the meaningful answer. | ||||||
| \bea | \bea | ||||||
| \frac{4.4 M kcal}{family}\cdot\frac{1 acre}{1.9M kcal}  & \textrm{~~or~~}& | \frac{4.4 M kcal}{family}\cdot\frac{1 acre}{1.9M kcal}  & \approx& 2.3 acre | ||||||
| \frac{4.4 M kcal}{family}\cdot\frac{1.9M kcal}{1 acre} . |  | ||||||
| \eea | \eea | ||||||
| The choice of operation is difficult to make without seeing the units present, which is again a learning opportunity for the students. | %The choice of operation is difficult to make without seeing the units present, which is again a learning opportunity for the students. | ||||||
| 
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| What does the answer of $2.3$ acres mean?  The university's $91m\times49m$ football field has an area of about $1.1$ acres, so you could say that a football field planted in potatoes will probably feed a family through the winter. (Deppe, 2020)  Can a person enjoy the benefits of urban living and grow all their own food?  The population density of New Jersey is $1,263~people/mile^2 \approx1.97~people/acre$ and our 4 person family needs $2.3$ acres for their potatoes.   | What does the answer of $2.3$ acres mean?  The university's $91m\times49m$ football field has an area of about $1.1$ acres, so you could say that a football field planted in potatoes will probably feed a family through the winter. (Deppe, 2020)  Can a person enjoy the benefits of urban living and grow all their own food?  The population density of New Jersey is $1,263~people/mile^2 \approx1.97~people/acre$ and our 4 person family needs $2.3$ acres for their potatoes.   | ||||||
| Unless the social model is one of a country Dacha or an endless suburb with no duplexes or apartment buildings, urban living and food self-sufficiency seem mutually exclusive. | Unless the social model is one of a country Dacha or an endless suburb with no duplexes or apartment buildings, urban living and food self-sufficiency seem mutually exclusive. | ||||||
| @ -256,7 +262,7 @@ Average USDA per acre yields for a number of commodity crops over time.  This `` | |||||||
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| \section{Example: How big could Tenochtitlan have been?} | \section{Example: How big could Tenochtitlan have been?} | ||||||
| The questions described thus far have largely been centered within a physics context.  The paper closes with two more examples that leverage this food energy picture to make historical claims.  The first example relates to the pre-Colombian capital of the Aztec Empire, Tenochtitlan, now known as Mexico City.  Tenochtitlan was built on and around a endorheic lake, Texcoco.  Crops were grown in shallow parts of the lake via chinampas, (Borunda \& Rodriguez, 2022) floating patches of decaying vegetation and soil.  Given the proximity to water and decaying vegetation, these fields were very fertile (Coe, 1964; Ebel, 2019) and some continue to be used in the present day.\footnote{ | The questions described thus far have largely been centered within a physics context.  The paper closes with two more examples that leverage this food energy picture to make historical claims.  The first example relates to the pre-Colombian capital of the Aztec Empire, Tenochtitlan, now known as Mexico City.  Tenochtitlan was built on and around a endorheic lake, Texcoco.  Crops were grown in shallow parts of the lake via chinampas, (Borunda \& Rodriguez, 2022) floating patches of decaying vegetation and soil.  Given the proximity to water and decaying vegetation, these fields were very fertile (Coe, 1964; Ebel, 2019) and some continue to be used in the present day.\footnote{ | ||||||
| Chinampas are still visible in sattelite imagery.  See for example $latitude=19.268$, $longitude=-99.087$. | Chinampas are still visible in satellite imagery.  See for example $latitude=19.268$, $longitude=-99.087$. | ||||||
| } | } | ||||||
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