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“Kingdom of Colours”
Oil, paint, and soap combine to create a polychrome landscape in Thomas Blanchard’s “Kingdom of Colours” short film. Colorful droplets of paint coated in oil form anti-bubbles that skim along the liquid surface until they burst, dispersing new colors. One of my favorite touches in this video, though, are the branching fingers of color that…
Creating Moana’s Ocean
Hopefully by now you’ve had an opportunity to see Disney’s film Moana. Fluid dynamics play a central role in the movie, and Disney’s animators faced the challenge of hundreds of shots requiring special effects to animate water, lava, waves, and wind. Science Friday has a great segment interviewing a couple of Moana’s animators, in which…
Sedimentary Swirls
Sediment swirls in Bear Lake caught the eye of an astronaut aboard the International Space Station last year. Bear Lake is situated in the Rocky Mountains, on the Idaho-Utah border. The eddies in the center of the lake are each about 3 km across and are likely the result of inflow from the lake’s tributaries.…
The Best of FYFD 2016
2016 was a wild ride here at FYFD, full of lots of travel and crazy things like making the New York Times and doing radio interviews. I also revamped the YouTube channel and went full-time doing science communication. But let’s look at what you thought was the best part of FYFD’s 2016 based on the most popular posts of…
Why Ice is Slippery
Ice is slippery. This is a fundamental fact we humans have dealt with so often that we rarely take the time to ask why. Other solids aren’t inherently slippery, so what is it that makes ice so? Remarkably, scientists only began to ask this question and propose theories within the past couple hundred years. One…
Paint Spilling Physics
There is a remarkable amount of physics contained in art. In this video, scientists from The Splash Lab explore some of the physics involved in pouring paint atop a rectangular post. The spreading paint transforms its shape repeatedly, and, at the corners of the post, it preserves a tiny history of all the colors poured.…
Erie Waves
Photographer Dave Sandford braved the cold and turbulent waters of Lake Erie in late fall to capture some remarkable wave action. Like on the ocean, waves in the Great Lakes are largely driven by winds, but lakes don’t develop the constant set of rolling waves that oceans do. Instead their waves are more erratic and…
Superhydrophobic Coatings
Superhydrophobic–or water repellent–materials are much sought after. Their remarkable ability to shed water is actually mechanical in nature–not chemical. Surfaces with a highly textured microstructure, like a lotus leaf or a butterfly wing, shed water naturally because air trapped between the high points prevents the water from contacting most of the solid surface. The result…
Growing Snowflakes
Watching a snowflake grow seems almost magical–the six-sided shape, the symmetry, the way every arm of it grows simultaneously. But it’s science that guides the snowflake, not magic. Snowflakes are ice crystals; their six-sided shape comes from how water molecules fit together. The elaborate structures and branches in a snowflake are the result of the…
When Jets Collide
Two liquids that collide don’t always coalesce. The image above shows two jets of silicone oil colliding. On the left, the jets collide and bounce off one another. On the right, at a slightly higher flow rate, the two jets coalesce. This bouncing, or noncoalescence, observed at lower speeds is due to an incredibly thin…