When a drop settles gently against a pool of the same liquid, it will coalesce. The process is not always a complete one, though; sometimes a smaller droplet breaks away and remains behind (to eventually do its own settling and coalescence). When this happens, it’s known as partial coalescence.
Here, researchers investigate ways to tune partial coalescence, specifically to produce more than a single droplet. To do so, they add surfactants to the oil layer surrounding their water droplet. The surfactants make the rebounding column of water skinnier, which triggers the Rayleigh-Plateau instability that’s necessary to break the column into more than one droplet. (Image and video credit: T. Dong and P. Angeli)