Nicole Sharp
Nicole Sharp

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

4,100 posts
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  • Vortex Street in the Clouds

    Most objects are not particularly aerodynamic or streamlined. When air flows over such bluff bodies, they can shed regular vortices from one side and then the other. This periodic shedding creates a von Karman vortex street, like this one stretching out from Isla Socorro off western Mexico. From the wind’s perspective, the volcanic island forms…

  • Flame Feedback

    When a flame is enclosed in a combustion chamber, it can create violent oscillations in the pressure field. Flames have a natural unsteadiness in their heat release. These temperature fluctuations create pressure waves in the chamber. In the right enclosure, those pressure waves resonate and feed energy back into the initial perturbation. This creates a self-exciting oscillation,…

  • Breaking Waves

    Most beach-goers have probably wondered just what makes the waves coming in to shore rear up and break. The secret lies in the depths–or rather the lack thereof–beneath the waves. Far from shore, the wave’s length scale is small compared to the ocean depth, and the ocean’s bottom is effectively infinitely far away to all…

  • Streamlines in Oil

    Bernoulli’s principle describes the relationship between pressure and velocity in a fluid: in short, an increase in velocity is accompanied by a drop in pressure and vice versa. This photo shows the results left behind by oil-flow visualization after subsonic flow has passed over a cone (flowing right to left). The orange-pink stripes mark the…

  • Falcon vs. Raven

    Earth Unplugged has posted some great high-speed footage of a peregrine falcon and a raven in flight. Notice how both birds draw their wings inward and back on the upstroke. By doing so, they decrease their drag and thus the energy necessary for flapping. On the downstroke, they extend their wings fully and increase their…

  • 101 Signals

    Welcome, Wired readers! I’m stunned, honored, and very grateful to see FYFD featured on this year’s 101 Signals science recommendations, especially given how much I admire many of the others on that list! The premise of FYFD is simple: every weekday I post a new photo or video and a brief explanation of the fluid dynamics…

  • Vibrating Droplets

    When still, water drops sitting on a surface are roughly hemispherical, drawn into that shape by surface tension. But on a vibrating surface, the same water drop displays many different shapes, like those in the video above. Researchers have observed more than 30 different mode shapes by varying the driving frequency. The metal mesh placed…

  • Elastic Walls and Viscous Fingers

    The Saffman-Taylor instability, characterized by the branchlike fingers formed when a less viscous fluid is injected into a more viscous one, is typically demonstrated between two rigid walls, as in part (a) of the figure above. But what happens if one of the rigid walls forming the Hele-Shaw cell is replaced with an elastic wall?…

  • Granular Gases

    Vibrating particles or granular materials can produce many fluid-like behaviors. In this video, researchers demonstrate how a granular gas made up of particles of two sizes behaves at different conditions. By tweaking the amplitude of the vibration, they alter how the particles cluster in a divided container. At large vibrational amplitudes, the particles behave much…

  • Rebounding Off Dry Ice

    Droplet rebound is frequently associated with superhydrophobic surfaces but can also be generated by very large temperature differences. For very hot substrates, a thin layer of the drop vaporizes on contact via the Leidenfrost effect and helps a drop rebound by preventing it from wetting the surface. This video shows almost the opposite: a water…