“Broken Water, Like Broken Glass”

A research poster showing cavitation in water between a plate and piston.

How can you break water? By accelerating it so quickly that the pressure drop forms cavitation bubbles. Here, a steel piston rests against a transparent plate, all underwater. When a hammer strike accelerates the piston away at around 1000g, the severe pressure drop tears the water into bubbles (bottom, left). As the bubbles expand, the nearby piston squishes them into pancakes (bottom, center). As they continue growing, the bubbles press into one another, squeezing thin ridges of water between them. The result (center) resembles broken glass. (Image credit: J. da Silva et al.)

A research poster showing cavitation in water between a plate and piston.
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