We’ve talked about aeroelastic flutter and the demise of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge before, but this explanation from Minute Physics does a nice job of outlining the process simply. As noted in the video, the common explanation of resonance is inaccurate because the wind was constant, so there was no driving frequency for the system. (In contrast, consider vibrating a fluid where the response of the fluid depends on the frequency of the vibrations. This is resonance.) Instead the constant wind supplied energy that fed the natural frequencies of the structure such that an uncontrolled excitation built up. (Video credit: Minute Physics)
Month: June 2012

Antibubbles
Antibubbles–a liquid droplet surrounded by a thin film of gas and immersed in more liquid–are fragile things. This video explores how antibubbles behave when placed in proximity to a tornado-like whirl. When placed near the eye, where fluid motion is primarily vertical, the antibubble is stretched vertically. When placed in the rotating eyewall, the antibubble is distorted into a ring-like shape before it breaks down. (Video credit: D. Terwagne et al; APS Gallery of Fluid Motion 2009)

Fractal Fluids
These images from a numerical simulation of a mixing layer between fluids of different density show the development and breakdown to Kelvin-Helmholtz waves. The black fluid is 3 times denser than the white fluid, and, as the two layers shear past one another, billow-like waves form (Fig 1(a)). Inside those billows, secondary and even tertiary billows form (Fig 1(a) and (b)). Fig 1 (c)-(e) show successive closeups on these waves, showing their beautiful fractal-like structure. (Photo credit: J. Fontane et al, 2008 Gallery of Fluid Motion) #

How Mosquitoes Fly in the Rain
One might think that rainfall would keep the mosquitoes away, but it turns out that rain strikes don’t bother these little pests much. Because the insect is so small and light compared to a falling raindrop, the water bounces off instead of splashing. This results in a relatively small transfer of momentum, although the mosquito does get deflected quite strongly. Researchers estimate that the insects endure accelerations up to 300 times that of gravity, which is more than 10 times what a human can withstand. (Video credit: A. Dickerson et al; submitted by Phillipe M.)

Dancing Sands
Here a collection of dry grains are vertically vibrated, creating a series of standing waves on the surface of the sand. The shapes of these Faraday waves are dependent upon the frequency of the vibration. Despite the solid nature of sand particles, this behavior is much the same as the behavior of a vibrated fluid.

Splash Rebound
A ball dropped onto a puddle loses some of its rebound momentum to fluid motion. On impact, a splash curtain and radial jet form as the fluid is displaced by the ball. As the ball rebounds, the splash curtain is drawn inward into a column of fluid drawn up by the ball, reminiscent of the way cats and dogs drink. Eventually, when the gravity’s force on the fluid column overcomes the force of the ball’s inertia, the fluid column pinches off and falls back downwards, leaving the ball free to utilize its remaining kinetic energy as it flies upward. (Photo credit: T. Killian, K. Langley, and T. Truscott)

Dolphin Bubble Rings
Dolphins create vortex rings to play with by exhaling through their blowholes. The sharp impulse of air, combined with the round shape, creates a vortex ring of bubbles. Humans can do this underwater, too, but dolphins aren’t content to lie at the bottom of the pool. Because smaller vortex rings are more coherent and last longer, they will break the growing vortex so that the vortex fragment rejoins as a smaller vortex ring. They also spin the water nearby to cause wave instabilities in the ring.

Rapid Freezing
Thermodynamics can play strange games with liquids. Here a bottle of chilled soda water is used to demonstrate a method of rapid freezing. Because the water is at a higher pressure than atmospheric, its temperature can be lower than the normal freezing point in a standard atmosphere. This is why the soda water remains a liquid in the bottle. However, when the bottle is opened, the pressure drops and the water’s temperature is too low to remain a liquid, so it rapidly freezes in the bottle. A similar mechanism may be at work below Antarctic glaciers. As the internal flow beneath the ice sheet forces water up submerged mountainsides, the pressure drops, causing the water to freeze into new ice at the bottom of the glacier.

Rotating or Not-Rotating?
Rotating a fluid often produces different dynamical behavior than for a non-rotating fluid. Here this concept is demonstrated by dropping creamer into a tank of water. Both experiments produce a turbulent plume, but the way the plume spreads and diffuses is much different in the case of the rotating tank, thanks to the Coriolis effect. (Video credit: SPINLab UCLA)

Honey Coiling
The liquid rope coiling effect occurs in viscous fluids like oil, honey, shampoo, or even lava when they fall from a height. The exact behavior of the coil depends on factors like the fluid viscosity, the height from which the fluid falls, the mass flow rate, and the radius of the falling jet. Here Destin of the Smarter Every Day series outlines the four regimes of liquid coiling behavior commonly observed. As with many problems in fluid dynamics the regimes are described in terms of limits, which can help simplify the mathematics. The viscous regime (2:34 in the video) exists in the limit of a small drop height, whereas the inertial regime (3:15) exists in the limit of large drop height. Many complicated physical problems, including those with nonlinear dynamics, are treated in this fashion. For more on the mathematics of the coiling effect, check out Ribe 2004 and Ribe et al. 2006. (Video credit: Destin/Smarter Every Day; submitted by inigox5)


