“Chaosmosis”
After many years of featuring work from the Gallery of Fluid Motion, I’m excited to announce a new public exhibition of art drawn from the competition: “Chaosmosis: Assigning Rhythm to Keep reading
Celebrating the physics of all that flows
After many years of featuring work from the Gallery of Fluid Motion, I’m excited to announce a new public exhibition of art drawn from the competition: “Chaosmosis: Assigning Rhythm to Keep reading
Air can dissolve in water, but not in ice. So as water freezes, any dissolved gases have to get squeezed out in order for the ice crystals to grow. Once Keep reading
When pulled, viscous liquids stretch into ligaments that thin and then break into droplets. In this video, researchers investigate how these ligaments break up, depending on their composition. The initial Keep reading
Adding just a little polymer to a fluid can make it viscoelastic and drastically change how it drips. A pure, viscoelastic fluid (left) necks down to a thin filament thanks Keep reading
When a drop hits a surface colder than its freezing point, there’s a competition between retraction and solidification that determines the final shape of the splat. For many materials, like Keep reading
At the altitudes where aircraft fly, it’s often cold enough for water drops to freeze in seconds or less. Once attached to a wing, such frozen drops disrupt the flow, Keep reading
When a water droplet hits a frozen surface, what happens depends significantly on the temperature of the substrate. At relatively high temperatures (-20 degrees C), the droplet freezes without any Keep reading