Rotating flows are full of delightful surprises. Here, the folks at the UCLA SpinLab demonstrate the power a little buoyancy has to liven up a flow. Their backdrop is a spinning tank of water; it’s been spinning long enough that it’s in what’s known as solid body rotation, meaning that the water in the tank moves as if it’s one big spinning object. To demonstrate this, they drop some plastic tracers into the water. These just drop to the floor of the tank without fluttering, showing that there’s no swirling going on in the tank. Then they add Alka-Seltzer tablets.
As the tablets dissolve, they release a stream of bubbles, which, thank to buoyancy, rise. As the bubbles rise, they drag the surrounding water with them. That motion, in turn, pulls water in from the surroundings to replace what’s moving upward. That incoming water has trace amounts of vorticity (largely due to the influence of friction near the tank’s bottom). As that vorticity moves inward, it speeds up to conserve angular momentum. This is, as the video notes, the same as a figure skater’s spin speeding up when she pulls in her arms. The result: a beautiful, spiraling bubble-filled vortex. (Video and image credit: UCLA SpinLab)
