Roman De Giuli’s short film “Stream” explores a macro world of color and flow, with a few glimpses behind-the-scenes at how the visuals get made. The artistic canvas here is a glass plate; the materials are oil, ink, and water. As simple as the ingredients are, though, the view is complex and enchanting. It’s amazing to see just how much goes on in an area the size of one’s thumb. (Image and video credit: R. De Giuli)
Year: 2021

The Mobile Mud Spring of Niland, CA
What’s part geyser, part mud pot, and all creeping, unstoppable natural disaster? The Niland Geyser, known as the world’s only moving mud spring. Dianna explores this geological mystery in the video above. Although the mud spring has been known for years, it was only in 2016 that it started moving toward railroad tracks and a state highway. So far engineering efforts to stop it have failed, so engineers are instead working to mitigate its effects on infrastructure.
That’s a tall order when dealing with a pit of unknown depth that’s constantly bubbling with deadly carbon dioxide. The spring managed to move past a 75-foot-deep wall and, on another occasion, sent heavy drilling mud flying skyward from its built-up pressure. Check out the full video to learn more. (Image and video credit: Physics Girl)

Skipping Stone Physics
Skipping stones across water has fascinated humans for millennia, but incredibly, we’re still uncovering the physics of this game today. A recent paper built and experimentally validated a mathematical model of a spinning, skipping disk. The authors found that, in order to skip, a stone needs to generate upward acceleration greater than 3.8 times gravity.
To get that lift, the stone needs both the Magnus effect and the gyro effect. The Magnus effect is an aerodynamic force generated by an object spinning in a fluid that curves it away from its direction of travel — it’s what curves a corner kick into the goal in a soccer match. The gyro — or gyroscopic — effect also has to do with spinning, but it’s a result of conservation of angular momentum. Essentially, when you try to shift the axis that a rotating object spins around, there’s a force that resists that change. (The classic demo for this uses a spinning bicycle wheel.)
In stone skipping, the gyro effect helps stabilize the stone’s bounce and, if it’s spinning fast enough, keeps its direction of travel straight. Once the stone’s spinning slows, the Magnus effect can start to curve its trajectory. (Image credit: B. Davies; research credit: J. Tang et al.; via Physics World; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)

The Intermittent Spring of Afton, WY
Yellowstone may get top billing, but Wyoming is home to more fluid dynamical wonders, like the world’s largest rhythmic spring. Located a little outside Afton, WY, Intermittent Spring — as the name indicates — runs for roughly 15 minutes, stops for the same length, then starts up again. The leading theory for this periodic flow depends on the siphon effect. Essentially, water runs continuously into a cavern underground, but to get to the surface, it must traverse a narrow tube with a high point that lies above the spring’s eventual exit. When the water level reaches that high point, it creates a siphon, sucking water out of the cavern and making the spring flow. But eventually the water level drops to the point where air rushes in, breaking off the flow until the water level recovers. That’s consistent with the spring’s behavior; it only runs in this intermittent fashion from late summer to fall, when groundwater levels are lower. (Image credit: Wikimedia Commons; video credit: University of Wyoming Extension; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)

Space Hurricanes
Researchers have observed their first “space hurricane” – a 1,000-km-wide vortex of plasma – in Earth’s upper atmosphere. Like conventional hurricanes, this storm featured precipitation (of electrons rather than rain), a calm eye at its center, and several spiral arms. Based on the group’s model, interactions between the solar wind and Earth’s magnetic fields drive the storm. Interestingly, the storm they observed occurred during a period of low solar and geomagnetic activity, which suggests that such space hurricanes could be frequent, both on Earth and in the upper atmospheres of other planets. (Image credit: Q. Zhang; research credit: Q. Zhang et al.; via Physics World)

Light Painting
Light streams from the branches of trees in this series from photographer Vitor Schietti. The effect is created with a combination of fireworks, long-exposure photography, and compositing. I love how the falling sparks create streaklines just like so many flow visualization diagnostics do! Follow more of Schietti’s work on Instagram. (Image credit: V. Schietti; via Colossal)

Where Does Stormwater Go?
Stormwater management is one of the biggest municipal challenges towns and cities face. Urban surfaces are largely impermeable, preventing rainwater from soaking into the ground. Instead roads, ditches, and channels collect water and, typically, divert it as quickly as possible into natural waterways.
In contrast, wild landscapes tend to slow water run-off, filtering it into the water table, soaking it up with vegetation, and distributing it across a larger area. Recently, cities have started using low-impact development strategies, like rooftop gardens and rainwater collection, to mimic natural landscapes in urban ones. (Image and video credit: Practical Engineering)

Falling Beads
Liquids flowing down a fiber can form bead-like droplets that may sit symmetrically (a) or asymmetrically (b) on the fiber. In general, the asymmetric droplets appear as surface tension increases or as the fiber diameter increases. The pattern of the droplets changes with flow rate. Within each subfigure, the flow rate increases from left to right. At low flow rates, we see only one or two large droplets migrating down the fiber. At moderate flow rates, a regular pattern of drops emerges. And at high flow rates, droplets coalesce on the fiber to form drops large enough that they fall and sweep up the downstream droplets. (Image and research credit: C. Gabbard and J. Bostwick)

Reintroducing Beavers
Beavers are impressive ecological engineers and a keystone species for wetland environments. But in the UK, it’s been nearly 400 years since beavers were regularly found in the wild. In the meantime, Victorian engineering sensibilities drastically altered the landscape to quickly drain rainwater from upstream locations, which unfortunately increases flooding dangers downstream.
But all of that is changing with the reintroduction of wild beavers in a Cornwall experiment. Within their 5 acres, the beavers are transforming the landscape by deepening ponds and slowing water drainage. Their dams create ideal habitat spaces not only for the beavers but for many other species of mammals, birds, and insects. Check out the full interview to learn more and see this previous post for a similar effort in the Western U.S. (Video and image credit: BBC Earth)

Rainfall Beyond Earth
Rain is not unique to our planet: Titan has methane rain and exoplanet WASP 78b is home to iron rain (ouch). A new study examines rainfall across planets from the perspective of individual rain drops. The authors examine raindrop shape, terminal velocity, and evaporation rate as a function of droplet size for a wide range of known and speculated atmospheres.
They found that raindrops are surprisingly universal. Although planets with higher gravity tend to produce smaller raindrops, they found a remarkably narrow range for maximum drop size. That’s a pretty wild result, all things considered! The idea that iron, ammonia, methane, and countless other fluids falling through vastly different atmospheres all share very common characteristics is fascinating. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Brian Swift; research credit: K. Loftus and R. Wordsworth; via Science News; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)




























