Nicole Sharp
Nicole Sharp

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

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  • The Kelvin-Helmholtz Instability in the Lab

    Though often spotted in water waves or clouds, the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability is easily demonstrated in the lab as well. Here a tank with two layers of liquid – fresh water on top and denser blue-dyed saltwater on the bottom – is used to generate the instability. When level, the two layers are stationary and stable…

  • Turning Sound into Light

    Sonoluminescence – the creation of light from sound – was discovered in the 1930s, and, due to the difficulty of obtaining direct measurements, the exact mechanism remains highly debated even today. The phenomenon typically takes place within a tiny cavitation bubble inside a liquid. When bombarded with ultrasonic sound, such a bubble will repeatedly expand…

  • The Kaye Effect

    When a viscous fluid falls onto a surface, it will form a heap, like honey coiling. But for shear-thinning liquids like soap or shampoo something a little wild can happen as the heap grows. A dimple can form and, when the incoming jet of fluid hits that dimple, it slips against it and is ejected…

  • Bubble Lenses

    In this video, artist Jesse Zanzinger experiments with the lens-like refractive properties of bubbles. Though focused on the bending of light, there’s plenty here in terms of coalescence, surface tension, and miscibility. He has a similar video that includes a shot of his set-up here. (Video credit: J. Zanzinger)

  • Fluids Round-up – 25 May 2013

    Sometimes I come across cool links and stories about fluid dynamics that don’t quite fit into a typical FYFD post, but I’d like to start sharing those semi-regularly with round-up posts. Here’s some fun stuff I’ve seen lately: We’ve talked before about penguins and fluid dynamics, but this IOP talk from Helen Czerski is a great…

  • Turbulence and Magnetic Field Lines

    During a solar flare, magnetic field lines on the sun are often visible due to the flow of plasma–charged particles–along the lines. According to theory, these magnetic lines should remain intact, but they are sometimes observed breaking and reconnecting with other lines. An interdisciplinary team of researchers suggests that turbulence may be the missing link. In…

  • Breaking into Droplets

    A falling column of liquid, like the water from your faucet, will tend to break up into a series of droplets due to the Plateau-Rayleigh instability. This instability is driven by surface tension. Small variations in the radius of the column occur naturally. Where the radius shrinks, the pressure due to surface tension increases, causing…

  • Bouncing on a Pool

    There’s something wonderfully serene about watching water droplets skate their way across the surface of a pool. Here the pool of water is being vibrated at a frequency just below the Faraday instability – meaning that no standing waves form on the surface. Instead, the bounce is just enough to create a thin layer of…

  • Effects of Hills on Flow

    Hills and other topology can have interesting and complex effects on a flowfield. With the FAITH experiment, NASA has been investigating an axisymmetric model hill using a combination of experimental methods. The video above shows flow visualization over the hill in a water channel using dye injection both upstream and downstream of the model. They’ve…

  • Mercedes-Benz Tornado

    The world’s most powerful artificial tornado is part of the Mercedes-Benz Museum in Stuttgart, Germany. Though popular enough with visitors that the staff will bring out smoke generators to make it visible, the tornado was not built as an attraction – It’s actually part of the building’s fire protection system. The modern open design of…