- Profile
Fluid Dynamics and Disease Transmission
Right now people around the world are experiencing daily disruptions as a result of the recently declared coronavirus pandemic. There is a lot we don’t know yet about coronavirus, though researchers are working around the clock to report new information. Today’s video, though a couple years old, focuses on an area of medical knowledge that’s…
Tranquilizer Darts in Slow Mo
Like most syringes, tranquilizer darts use pressure to drive flow. But where a typical syringe has that pressurization provided by a human driving the piston, tranquilizer darts must deploy without any hands-on action. As shown in the video above, this is achieved by pressurization prior to firing. The tranquilizer dart has a few key features.…
Submarine Canyons Focus Waves
In winter months Toyama Bay in Japan can get hammered by waves nearly 10 meters in height. These waves, known as YoriMawari-nami, pose dangers to both infrastructure and citizens, and, thus far, are not captured by typical forecasting models. A new study indicates that these waves have their origin in the particular topography of Toyama…
Pearls On a Puddle
Leave a drop of coffee sitting on a surface and it will leave behind a ring of particulates once the water evaporates. But what happens to a droplet made up of multiple liquids that evaporate differently? That’s the subject of this new study. Researchers mixed a volatile drop (isopropyl alcohol) with a smaller amount of…
The Sand Sea’s End
The northern extent of Africa’s Namib Sand Sea ends where the reddish dunes meet the Kuiseb River and the hard, rocky land on its other side. Within the sand sea, dunes stretch as high as 300 meters while the prevailing winds create and march them across the desert. Although dunes rarely occur in isolation, the…
Hydrodynamics of Sheep
As we’ve discussed previously, not all fluid-like behavior occurs within a literal fluid. Many groups of organisms — humans included — behave like a fluid en masse. Herds of sheep are a fantastic example of this, and now researchers have actually analyzed footage of sheep as a fluid! The authors find strong evidence for emergent…
“The Other Side”
“The Other Side” is a short film imagining fluids on the other side of people’s eyes. The fast-paced editing makes this one feel rather different from Thomas Blanchard’s other films, which often take the time to linger on the mixing of soaps, inks, and paints that form the bulk of the imagery. There are hints…
Ice Rings Caused By Underlying Eddies
Observations of strange ice rings on Lake Baikal, the world’s deepest lake, have puzzled scientists for decades. Surveys of satellite imagery have revealed rings on Baikal and two other lakes dating back to the 1960s and some of our earliest satellite images. The rings are roughly 5-7 km in diameter, with a dark layer of…
Vortex Collisions Leave Clues to Turbulence
Vortex ring collisions have long been admired for their beauty, but they’re now shedding light on the fundamental interactions that lead to turbulence. By dying just the cores of colliding vortex rings (Image 2), researchers observed anti-symmetric perturbations that develop along each core as they interact. These are indicative of what’s known as the elliptical…
Levitation Without Boiling
One way to levitate droplets is to place them on a surface heated much higher than the droplet’s boiling point. This creates the Leidenfrost effect, where a droplet levitates on a thin layer of its own evaporating vapor. In this study, the situation is quite different. Although the underlying pool of liquid — here, silicone…