Nicole Sharp
Nicole Sharp

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

4,099 posts
324 followers
  • Dye Flow

    Fluid flow near a surface–inside the boundary layer–can often be unstable. This image shows one possible instability, formed when a cylinder is rotated back and forth about its longitudinal axis. This oscillation and the curvature of the cylinder destabilize flow in the boundary layer, forming vortices that line the cylinder. This particular behavior is called a…

  • Etna’s Eruption

    After some rumblings in recent weeks, Italy’s Mt. Etna erupted overnight on February 19th, sending fountains of lava shooting into the dark. This impressive video from Klaus Dorschfeldt, a videographer for Italy’s National Institute for Geophysics and Vulcanology, shows the nighttime eruption, including the dark, turbulent outline of a pyroclastic flow of rock and hot…

  • Fishbones

    When two liquid jets collide, they can form an array of shapes ranging from a chain-like stream or a liquid sheet to a fishbone-type structure of periodic droplets. This series of images show the collision of two viscoelastic jets–in which polymer additives give the fluids elasticity properties unlike those of familiar Newtonian fluids like water. The…

  • Laser-Induced Fluorescence

    As demonstrated in the video above, lasers can be used to excite molecules into a higher energy state, which will decay via the emission of photons, causing the medium to glow. This laser-induced fluorescence is utilized in several techniques for measurements in fluid dynamics, including planar laser-induced fluorescence (PLIF) and molecular tagging velocimetry (MTV). In…

  • Jump in a Lake

    Ever wonder what would happen if every person on earth jumped into a lake at the same time? Wonder no more! Physicist Rhett Allain breaks it down over at Dot Physics.

  • Liquid Sculptures

    Artist Corrie White uses dyes and droplets to capture fantastical liquid sculptures at high-speed. The mushroom-like upper half of this photo is formed when the rebounding jet from one droplet’s impact on the water is hit by a well-timed second droplet, creating the splash’s umbrella. In the lower half of the picture, we see the…

  • The 9th Pitch Drop is Coming

    Remember that 83-year-old pitch drop experiment designed to measure the viscosity of pitch? Well, rumor has it that the ninth drop is due to fall at any time. Will you catch it on the webcam?

  • Iceberg Calving

    When sections of glaciers break off to create icebergs, scientists call it calving. Usually large sections of ice will break off and immediately capsize, with an energy equivalent to up to 40 kilotons of TNT. These large events are sufficient to cause measurable seismic signals. How hydrodynamic forces impact the contact and pressure forces between…

  • Stalling

    [original media no longer available] At high angles of attack, the flow around the leading edge of an airfoil can separate from the airfoil, leading to a drastic loss of lift also known as stall. Separation of the flow from the surface occurs because the pressure is increasing past the initial curve of the leading…

  • Happy Valentine’s Day!

    Here’s a potential flow field with heart-shaped streamlines, made just for you. Thank you to everyone for having helped made FYFD such a success over these 700 posts, whether by liking, reblogging, tweeting, or telling a friend. Happy Valentine’s Day! For the curious among you, the flow is a superposition of uniform flow, two sources, and…