Month: June 2020

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    Exploring Martian Mud Flows

    When looking at Mars and other parts of our solar system, planetary scientists are faced with a critical question: if what I’m looking at is similar to something on Earth, did it form the same way it does here? In other words, if something on Mars looks like a terrestrial lava flow, is it actually made of igneous rock or something else?

    To tackle this question, a team of researchers explored mud flows in a pressure chamber under both Earth-like and Martian conditions. They found that mud flowed quite freely on Earth, but with Martian temperatures and pressures, the flows resembled lava flows like those found in Hawaii or the Galapagos Islands.

    On Mars, mud begins boiling once it reaches the low pressure of the surface. This boiling cools it, causing the outer layer of the mud to freeze into an increasingly viscous crust, which changes how the mud flows. In this regard, it’s very similar to cooling lava, even though the heat loss mechanisms are different. (Video and research credit: P. Brož et al.; image credit: N. Sharp; see also P. Brož; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)

  • New Signs of Turbulence in Blood Flow

    New Signs of Turbulence in Blood Flow

    Our bodies are filled with a network of blood vessels responsible for keeping our cells oxygenated and carrying away waste products. In many ways, our blood vessels are tiny pipes, but there’s a crucial difference in the flow they carry: it’s pulsatile. Because the flow is driven by our hearts, rather than a continuous pump, every heartbeat creates a distinct cycle of acceleration and deceleration in the flow. And new research has found that this cycle, when combined with curvature or flow restrictions like plaque build-up, can create turbulence in unexpected places.

    Specifically, the researchers found that decelerating pipe flows can develop a helical instability that breaks down into turbulence, even in vessels where purely laminar flow would be expected. In the animations above, you can see the flow slow, develop swirls and then break into turbulence. The flow becomes laminar again as it accelerates, but during that brief bout of turbulence there’s much higher forces on the walls of a blood vessel. Over time, that extra force could contribute to inflammation or even hardening of the arteries. (Image and research credit: D. Xu et al.; via phys.org)