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Here is the follow up work which looks at air flows when there is a cavity in the bottom of the hive. It looks at the changes resulting from different cavity depths. They still haven't done an OMF one yet.
http://www.uoguelph.ca/canpolin/Publications/ThompsonCody_MSc2011_edited.pdf
The flow of air through the entrance is greatest when the temperature difference is greatest (between inside & outside the hive), and increases as the depth of the cavity increases. With a very shallow cavity, or no cavity, a lot more air from outside penetrates the upper parts of the hive, but as the cavity depth increases a vortex is created which buffers most of the hive from the outside air flow (it enters, hits the back wall and bounces back out).
I would have thought that a bottom cavity might result in burr comb, but apparently colonies in tree holes leave a space below comb that is a lot bigger than bee space.
http://www.uoguelph.ca/canpolin/Publications/ThompsonCody_MSc2011_edited.pdf
The flow of air through the entrance is greatest when the temperature difference is greatest (between inside & outside the hive), and increases as the depth of the cavity increases. With a very shallow cavity, or no cavity, a lot more air from outside penetrates the upper parts of the hive, but as the cavity depth increases a vortex is created which buffers most of the hive from the outside air flow (it enters, hits the back wall and bounces back out).
I would have thought that a bottom cavity might result in burr comb, but apparently colonies in tree holes leave a space below comb that is a lot bigger than bee space.