- Profile
Windy Urban Corridors (*)
For pedestrians, windy conditions can be uncomfortable or even downright dangerous. And while you might expect the buildings of an urban environment to protect people from the wind, that’s not always the case. The image above shows a simulation of ground-level wind conditions in Venice on a breezy day. While many areas, shown in blue…
Sponsored Post Policy
In order to help support FYFD and continue its mission of bringing you a daily dose of fluidsy science, I will be posting occasional sponsored blog posts, beginning tomorrow. There are a couple of important things I want you to know: – I still have full editorial control of sponsored posts. In fact, one of…
Bursting Droplets
Mixing multiple fluids can often lead to surprising and mesmerizing effects, whether it’s droplets that dance or tears along the walls of a wine glass. A recent paper highlights another such mixture-driven instability – the bursting of a water-alcohol droplet deposited on an oil bath. The Lutetium Project tackles the physics behind this colorful burst…
Breaking the Wave Speed Limit
Whirligig beetles are small surface swimming insects. As they race across the water surface, they create both visible and unnoticeable waves on the water. These waves are the result of both surface tension and gravity. Typically, it’s the wavelength of the gravity waves that limit a swimmer or boat’s speed. When the wavelength of the…
How Jet Engines Work
Jet engines are a major part of aviation today, and this great video from the new LIB LAB project breaks down how jet engines operate. It focuses especially on the subject of combustion, in which fuel-air mixtures are burned to generate power and thrust. By breaking fuels down into simpler compounds, jet engines are able…
Supporting Bubbles
Surface tension holds small droplets in a partial sphere known as a spherical cap. But when droplets become larger, they flatten out into puddles due to the influence of gravity. In contrast, soap bubbles remain spherical to much larger sizes. The bubble pictured above, for example, is more than 1 meter in radius and nearly…
Spillways
Extensive rains in California have brought an unusual sight to Lake Berryessa – an overflowing spillway. The upper photo, taken in 2010, shows the concrete structure of the spillway’s entrance, known as a bellmouth – or, in the words of locals, a glory hole. When the water level rises above the concrete, water begins to…
Battery Rockets
When I post Slow Mo Guys videos, it often comes with a warning not to try this at home. For their latest video, that deserves an extra-special mention: seriously, don’t try this. In this video, Dan and Gav explode lithium-ion batteries. In the process, they discover a safety feature – namely vents on one face of…
Wrinkling Winds
If you’ve ever sat out on a lake and just watched the water’s surface, you’ve probably noticed how complex and variable it looks. There may be waves that rock your kayak but there are smaller variations, too, like little ripples or even tiny wrinkles that appear on the surface. Much of this activity comes from…
Aerodynamic Leidenfrost Effect
If you place a droplet on a surface much hotter than its boiling point, that droplet will skitter and float almost frictionlessly across the surface on a thin layer of its own vapor. This is what is known as the Leidenfrost effect. But you don’t have to heat a surface to get this behavior. There’s…