Photographer Mitch Dobrowner captures the power of major storm systems across the western United States and Canada in these dramatic black-and-white images. Misty clouds, massive downpours, bulbous mammatus clouds, and lonely landscapes abound. You can find more of his work on his website and Instagram. (Image credit: M. Dobrowner; via Colossal)
Year: 2021

Marshland Wave Damping
Coastal marshes are a critical natural defense against flooding. The flexible plants of the marsh both slow the water’s current and help damp waves. As a result of that hydrodynamic dissipation, marshes help protect against erosion and reduce the magnitude of flooding events. But coastal managers looking to maintain or improve their marshes in order to mitigate climate-change-driven storms need to be able to predict what level of vegetation they need.
To that end, a team of researchers has built a new model to better capture the flow effects of marsh grasses. Building from an individual, flexible plant (as opposed to a rigid cylinder, as grass is often represented), the authors constructed a model able to predict wave dissipation for many marsh configurations, which should help better predict the infrastructure changes needed in different coastal regions. (Image credit: T. Marquis; research credit: X. Zhang and H. Nepf; via APS Physics)

Siberia’s Lena River Delta
As rivers near the sea, they often slow down and branch out, creating intricate paths through delta wetlands. This video explores the Arctic’s largest river delta, that of the Lena River in Siberia, during its spring and summer flood season. The images were all taken by satellite and processed with color enhancements to highlight patterns in the water. Although this is not quite how the area would appear by eye, all of the visible patterns are real. (Image credit: N. Kuring/NASA’s Ocean Color Web; video credit: K. Hansen; via NASA Earth Observatory)

Cloud-Making Waves
As sea ice disappears in the Arctic Ocean, it leaves behind higher waves on the open water. These large waves help inject sea salt and organic matter into the atmosphere, where they can serve as nucleation sites for ice crystals. A recent field expedition in the Chukchi Sea observed high concentrations of organic particulates in the air and more ice-producing clouds during periods of high wave action. So, oddly enough, the loss of sea ice may lead to more cloud cover and precipitation in the Arctic (though the effect is likely not strong enough to entirely mitigate the effects of ice loss). It’s another example of the intricate and complex connections between ice, ocean, and atmosphere in the Arctic climate. (Image credit: A. Antas-Bergkvist; research credit: J. Inoue et al.; via Gizmodo)

Making Lava Lamps
Since their invention in the 1960s, lava lamps have been a fascinating example of convection in action. In this video, we see how they’re manufactured, including blowing the glass bottles, shaping the metal holder, and filling the lamps. The key to the lamp’s performance is the delicate thermal balance of its two liquids. As the waxy liquid warms, it floats up the lamp until it reaches the top, cools, and sinks back down to begin again. The exact formulation of the liquids is a closely guarded secret! Want more lava lamps? Check out how a wall of them help secure Internet traffic. (Image and video credit: Business Insider)

Making Horsehair Pottery
Native American potter Eric Louis combines traditional and modern techniques in his horsehair pottery. Like his mother and grandmother before him, he collects local clay and pottery shards to make the slip that forms his pieces. After molding and an initial firing in a kiln, he uses wood chips to keep the pottery hot while he applies horsehair. The hair ignites and carbonizes, leaving behind distinctive patterns in the clay that create a backdrop for his etchings. See more of his finished work here. (Image and video credit: Insider)

Hagfish Slime
The eel-like hagfish is a superpowered escape artist, thanks to its slime. When threatened, the hagfish releases long protein-rich threads that, when combined with turbulent sea water, unravel to form large volumes of viscoelastic slime that clog the gills of its predators. A new study shows that larger hagfish produce longer and thicker threads in their slime, enabling them to escape larger predators than their smaller brethren can.
The properties of hagfish slime are tuned for defense. When stretched, the long protein threads resist, making the slime more viscous. Since most fish use suction methods to catch prey, that means a predator attacking a hagfish will quickly exacerbate its slimy problems. But the hagfish itself can easily escape its slime by tying itself in a knot. The threads inside the slime collapse when sheared, so the knot-tying of the hagfish slips the slime right off. (Image credit: T. Winegard; research credit: Y. Zeng et al.; via Ars Technica; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)

Paint Spinning
In a return to their roots, this Slow Mo Guys video features paint flowing on (and off!) a spinning disk. To help us see what’s going on, Gav uses a trick that’s familiar to many fluid dynamicists: he rotates the high-speed footage at the same speed that the disk rotates. This transformation places the viewer into a reference frame where the disk appears stationary, so that small changes in the flow are apparent.
It makes for a gorgeous view as centrifugal force flings the paint outward and eventually breaks it into drops. The rotation speed is unfortunately so high that the spinning completely dominates all other forces. The few runs with more viscous acrylic paint show some hints of more interesting behaviors that might be visible with a slower rotation rate (which would make the tug of war between inertia/viscosity/surface tension and centrifugal force less one-sided). Anyone got a high-speed camera, some speed control, and a willingness to get messy? (Image and video credit: The Slow Mo Guys)

Turbulent Puffs
When a burst of air gets expelled into still surroundings — like when a person coughs — it forms a turbulent puff like the one seen here. Puffs can be surprisingly long-lasting, though these miniature clouds slow down and expand over time. How they behave is critical to understanding the spread of pollution as well as how respiratory illnesses like COVID-19 travel. In this study, researchers found that buoyancy is also a critical factor. When the puff is warmer than its surroundings, it rises higher, lasts longer, and travels further. That might help explain why respiratory illnesses like the flu spread more readily in the winter than in warmer months. (Image and research credit: A. Mazzino and M. Rosti; via Physics World; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)

Bullseye
The Cumbre Vieja volcano in the Canary Islands began erupting in mid-September 2021. This satellite image, captured October 1st, shows a peculiar bullseye-like cloud over the volcano. Hot water vapor and exhaust gases rose rapidly from the erupting volcano until colliding with a drier, warmer air layer at an altitude of 5.3 kilometers. The warm upper layer, known as a temperature inversion, prevented the volcanic gases from rising any further, so they instead spread horizontally. The outflow from the volcano varies and is non-uniform, and its fluctuations generated gravity waves that are visible here as the expanding rings of clouds. (Image credit: L. Dauphin; via NASA Earth Observatory)




























