Shock waves emanating from a trombone have been captured on video for the first time using schlieren photography. With a harsh blast from the mouthpiece, it’s possible for pressure waves Keep reading
Month: December 2024
Microgravity Combustion
Combustion in microgravity is markedly different than that on earth, due to a lack of buoyant convection. The combustion of a droplet of heptane is shown here as a composite Keep reading
Viscous Fingers
The Saffman-Taylor instability occurs when a less viscous fluid is injected into a more viscous one, usually in a Hele-Shaw cell. Here oil paint and mineral spirits were painted onto Keep reading
How Dogs Drink
Not long ago, researchers showed that cats use friction to their advantage when drawing liquids into their mouths. New research shows that dogs rely on the same mechanism–they’re just far Keep reading
Volcanic Ash Plume
Video footage of Iceland’s Grimsvotn volcano erupting shows a massive turbulent plume of ash. The largest scales of the plume are of the order of hundreds, if not thousands of Keep reading
Flowing Up a Waterfall
Tea-drinking physicists found that it’s possible for particles to flow up a short (< 1 cm) waterfall to contaminate pure upstream sources. Their apparatus is shown above, along with an Keep reading
Ferrofluid Self-Organization
The behavior of a ferrofluid subject to magnetic fields can be fascinating. Here a ferrofluid is subjected to a permanent magnet and thinner is added to the ferrofluid. As it Keep reading
Feathering on SpaceShipTwo
Virgin Galactic and Scaled Composites recently performed their first feathered flight with SpaceShipTwo, which is on track to be the first commercial spaceship. Feathering is a re-entry technique devised by Keep reading
White Hole Analogues
A white hole–the cosmological opposite of a black hole–is a singularity from which matter emerges but which matter can never enter from beyond the event horizon. Hydraulic jumps, those rings Keep reading
Venom Properties
Most venomous snakes deliver venom to their prey via grooves in their fangs, rather than through a pressurized bolus through hollow fangs. New research shows that these venoms are shear-thinning Keep reading