When you turn on your kitchen faucet, you may have noticed a big circle that forms on the bottom of the sink. This is a hydraulic jump, a region where fast-moving, shallow flow shifts to a slower-moving, deeper flow. Although these jumps start out circular, if the fluid is deeper than a critical value, the jump will break down and form polygons, like the one above. Exactly what shape the jump forms depends on many factors: flow speed, fluid depth, and flow history. The same flow conditions can even form more than one shape. But all of these shapes have one thing in common: their corners are universally around 114 degrees with a radius of 3.5 millimeters. (Image and research credit: S. Tamim et al.; via PRF)
Celebrating the physics of all that flows