- Profile
“Catacomb of Veils”
Burning Man’s “Catacomb of Veils”, the largest sculpture burned in the 2016 event, produced a series of smoke tornadoes as it blazed. Like dust devils or fire tornadoes, these vortices are driven by hot, buoyant air rising – in this case, from the fire. As the surrounding air moves in toward the fire, any rotational motion,…
Happy 50th, Star Trek!
fuckyeahfluiddynamics: Today’s post is largely brought to you by the fact that I have been sick the past four days and my fiance and I have been bingeing on Star Trek Voyager. At some point, we began wondering about the sequence from 0:30-0:49 in which Voyager flies through a nebula and leaves a wake of von…
Hearing in Space
Everyone knows that, in space, no one can hear you scream. Sound is a wave that requires a medium to travel through, and if space is empty, there’s no medium to carry that sound. Except, as Mike from The Point Studios explains, empty is a relative term. Space is full of dust and gas and…
Roll Cloud Over Chicago
A cold front passing through Chicago last week triggered a roll cloud, shown in the timelapse above. These clouds look like spinning horizontal tubes and form in areas where cool, sinking air displaces warmer, moist air to higher altitudes. The moist air is forced up along the cloud’s leading edge, causing it to cool and…
Bioluminescent Shrimp
Trevor Williams and Jonathan Galione of Tdub Photo captured these beautiful images of bioluminescent shrimp along the Japanese coast. The duo collected the tiny shrimp and poured them over and near rocks to create the effect they wanted. With their blue light, the shrimp act like tracer particles in the water, and with long exposures,…
Where Does the Sun End?
How do you define the edge of our sun? There’s a distinct surface to it, but our star is also surrounded by the corona, an even hotter region of plasma twisted by magnetic fields. The corona is sort of like the sun’s atmosphere. Farther out in the solar system, we receive a constant barrage of…
Microburst
Earlier this week a Columbus, OH TV station tower camera caught this awesome timelapse footage of several microbursts in a thunderstorm. A microburst is a sudden, localized downdraft inside the storm. You can see a clear microburst starting at about 0:30 seconds. Note how it flares up and out as it hits the ground, eventually…
Leidenfrost Atop Gasoline
The animations above show a little of what happens when you pour a spoonful of liquid nitrogen onto a container of gasoline. A couple of things are happening simultaneously here. First of all, the liquid nitrogen is experiencing the Leidenfrost effect. Because of the extreme difference in temperature between the gasoline (~20 degrees C) and…
Making Droplets Stick
Lots of plants have evolved leaves that are superhydrophobic – that is, water repellent. For a plant, this makes a lot of sense. A superhydrophobic leaf will make water bounce and run off, draining down to where the plants roots can drink it up. But this same feature can be a frustration to farmers who…
Gunshot Back-Splatter
Today blood pattern analysis is an important forensic technique used in reconstructing the events at crime scenes. Many methods use straight-line trajectories to try to isolate the origin of blood splatters, but this discounts the effects of gravity and drag on flying droplets. A new theory models the back-splatter of a gunshot wound fluid dynamically.…