Nicole Sharp
Nicole Sharp

Celebrating the physics of all that flows with Nicole Sharp, Ph.D.

4,104 posts
325 followers
  • Bubbling

    Many chemical reactions produce gases as a stream of bubbles out of a solution. Here we see the electrolysis of an aqueous sodium hydroxide solution (NaOH), which produces hydrogen gas on the cathode (left) and oxygen gas on the anode (right). In timelapse, the gas bubbles nucleate on the electrode, slowly growing larger. Once the…

  • Swirls of Color

    These beautiful swirls show the wake downstream of a thin plate. Here water is flowing from left to right and dye introduced on the plate (upstream and unseen in the photo) curls up into vortices. The vortices in the top row rotate clockwise, while the vortices along the bottom rotate anti-clockwise. This pattern of alternating…

  • Stall with Pitching Foils

    For a fixed-wing aircraft, stall – the point where airflow around the wing separates and lift is lost – is an enemy. It’s the precursor to a stomach-turning freefall for the airplane and its contents. But the story is rather different when the wing is actively pitching through these high angles of attack. In this…

  • Phytoplankton Swirl

    View this post on Instagram Every summer, phytoplankton spread across the northern basins of the North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans, with blooms spanning hundreds and sometimes thousands of kilometers. One of our Earth-observing satellites captured this natural-color image of striking swirls of green seawater rich with blooms of phytoplankton whirling in the Gulf of Finland,…

  • Ants Avoid Traffic Jams by Giving Up

    Both ants and traffic are well-connected to fluid dynamics, even if they are not, strictly speaking, fluids. As it happens, ant traffic has interesting implications not only for human transit but for avoiding clogs in crowds or when pouring granular materials.  Ants tend to dig narrow tunnels. This helps individual ants recover from potential slips,…

  • Settling in Straws

    At some point in your life, you’ve probably stuck your finger over the end of a straw and used it to pick up the liquid you’re drinking. If you lift the straw so that the end is still in your drink and remove your finger from the top, the liquid level in the straw will…

  • Oobleck Under Impact

    Fluids like air and water are Newtonian, which means that the way they deform does not depend on how the force on them gets applied. Many other fluids, however, are non-Newtonian. How they behave depends on how force is applied to them. The Internet’s favorite non-Newtonian fluid is probably oobleck, a mixture of cornstarch and…

  • Making Champagne for Space

    Humanity’s ongoing quest to enjoy beloved beverages in space has a new entry: champagne. French champagne maker Mumm has announced a new line with specially designed bottles to dispense champagne in microgravity. The bottles feature an internal piston that allows users to release the contents from the bottle in a controlled manner. Rather than pouring…

  • Supernumerary Bows

    After the rain of Hurricane Florence came the rainbow, or rainbows, in this case. Photographer John Entwistle captured this image of a rainbow with several additional supernumerary bows. The inner fringes seen here form when light passes through water droplets that are all close to the same size; given the spread seen here, the droplets…

  • Flying on Flexible Wings

    Bats are incredible and rather unique among today’s fliers. Like birds, they flap to produce their lift and thrust, but where birds have relatively stiff wings, a bat’s wings are flexible. The thin webbing of skin stretched between the bat’s finger joints has muscles inside it that fire as the mammal flaps. This means that…