Nicole Sharp
Nicole Sharp

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

4,104 posts
325 followers
  • Space Shuttle Sonic Booms

    The Space Shuttle had a famous double sonic boom when passing overhead during re-entry. This schlieren flow visualization of a model shuttle at Mach 3 reveals the source of the sound: the fore and aft shock waves on the vehicle. The nose of the shuttle generates the strongest shock wave since it is the first…

  • Catching Particles with Sound

    Acoustic levitation traps particles using specially shaped sound waves, but, thus far, it’s only been useful for small particles. One common method of trapping forms the sound waves into a vortex-like shape. Particles in one of these acoustic vortices will spin rapidly, become unstable, and get ejected from the vortex if they’re larger than about…

  • “Dance Dance”

    Artist Thomas Blanchard is no stranger to fluid dynamics. His previous short films focused on mixtures of oil and paint, but in “Dance Dance,” flowers are front and center. There are obvious splashes of color and clouds of diffusion toward the end of the video, but fluid dynamics are there throughout. The oozing, inexorable march of…

  • Rain on Car Windows

    As a child, I loved to ride in the car while it was raining. The raindrops on the window slid around in ways that fascinated and confused me. The idea that the raindrops ran up the window when the car moved made sense if the wind was pushing them, but why didn’t they just fly…

  • Jovian Polar Vortices

    Jupiter’s atmosphere is full of enduring mysteries, and its poles are no exception. Instruments aboard the Juno spacecraft have gotten a better look at Jupiter’s North and South poles than any previous mission, and what they’ve found raises even more questions. Both of Jupiter’s poles feature a central cyclone ringed by other, similarly-sized cyclones. The…

  • Absorbing Bubbles

    This is a bubble absorber. It’s formed from an array of three springs, seen end-on in the upper center, each of which is coated to make it superhydrophobic. The hollow interior of the springs is filled with air and ventilated to the atmosphere. As bubbles rise through the water, they contact the springs and readily…

  • Nautilus Swimming

    The shellbound chambered nautilus is a champion of underwater jet propulsion. It can eke out efficiencies as high as 75%, far outclassing other jet-based swimmers like squid, salps, and jellyfish. That high efficiency is especially important for the nautilus, which spends a great deal of time at depths where the oxygen needed to fuel movement…

  • Caught in a Whirl

    View this post on Instagram #menorca #bubblering #jellyfish #freedive #goproes #gopro @goproes @gopro @angels.of.the.sea A post shared by Victor de Valles (@victordevalles) on Jun 6, 2017 at 12:15am PDT Vortex rings may look relatively calm, but they are concentrated regions of intensely spinning flow, as this poor jellyfish demonstrates. The rings form when a high-speed…

  • Castle-like Clouds

    An astronaut captured this towering cloud over Andros Island from orbit aboard the ISS. This is a cumulus castellanus cloud, named for the castle-like crenelations at its top. Castellanus clouds form in areas with strong vertical updrafts, often due to cloud-level atmospheric instabilities rather than heating at the Earth’s surface. These clouds frequently proceed rain…

  • Modons

    The spin of the Earth creates myriad eddies in our oceans, most of which move slowly westward at a speed dependent on their latitude. You can see many in the animation above as green and red rings slowly marching to the left. According to theory, it’s possible for two of these eddies to combine to…