Scaling properties of wood fractured surfaces are obtained from samples of
three different sizes. Two different woods are studied: Norway spruce and
Maritime pine. Fracture surfaces are shown to display an anomalous dynamic
scaling of the crack roughness. This anomalous scaling behavior involves the
existence of two different and independent roughness exponents. We determine
the local roughness exponents ζloc to be 0.87 for spruce and 0.88
for pine. These results are consistent with the conjecture of a universal local
roughness exponent. The global roughness exponent is different for both woods,
ζ = 1.60 for spruce and ζ = 1.35 for pine. We argue that the global
roughness exponent ζ is a good index for material characterization.Comment: 7 two columns pages plus 8 ps figures, uses psfig. To appear in
Physical Review