Nicole Sharp
Nicole Sharp

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

4,099 posts
324 followers
  • Shedding Vortices

    The von Karman vortex street of shed vortices that form the wake of a stationary cylinder are a classic image of fluid dynamics. Here we see a very different wake structure, also made up of vortices shed from a cylindrical body.  This wake is formed by two identical cylinders, each rotating at the same rotational…

  • Mixing Physics

    One of the most commonly observed fluid instabilities is the Rayleigh-Taylor instability, which occurs between fluids of differing densities.  It’s most often seen when a denser fluid sits over a lower density fluid. In the video above, this is demonstrated experimentally: a lower density green fluid mixes in with the clear, higher density fluid.  This…

  • Sloshing in a Bouncing Sphere

    The sloshing of liquids inside solids is usually presented as a difficulty to overcome, as with the transport of tanks, the motion of fuel in satellites, or even the problem of walking with a full cup of coffee. But liquids also make a very effective damper, as in the case of a bouncing ball partially…

  • Antarctic Ice Flows

    Even frozen ice moves and flows, though too slowly to see with the naked eye. By combining satellite imagery from NASA, JAXA, CSA, and ESA, researchers were able to map the flow of ice across Antarctica, discovering ice streams (shown in blue and purple above) that can move hundreds of meters a year.  The dynamics…

  • Countertop Fliers

    http://s3.amazonaws.com/scifri-videos/flyer-121611.mp4 In this video, researcher Leif Ristroph and his colleagues have used a clever way to simulate flapping flight, not by actuating their fliers but by oscillating the flow. The flow is driven by a speaker, which causes the air above it to move up and down. Using straws to simulate the honeycomb flow conditioners…

  • Ocean Waves in the Sky

    These wave-like Kelvin-Helmholtz clouds can form due to shear between different layers of air in the atmosphere. When one region of air has a higher velocity than the other, their interface forms a shear layer, which can break down in this wavy pattern. In this case, the lower layer of air was moist enough to…

  • The Water Bridge

    This short film offers an artistic look at the phenomenon of the water bridge. When subjected to a large voltage difference, such as the 30 kV used in the film, flow can be induced between water in two separated beakers. This creates a water bridge seemingly floating on air. There are two main forces opposing…

  • The Kaye Effect

    The Kaye effect is an instability particular to a falling stream of non-Newtonian fluids with shear-thinning properties. When these fluids are deformed, their viscosity decreases; this, for example, is why ketchup flows out of a bottle more easily once it’s moving. Like most fluids, the falling shampoo creates a heap on the surface. The Kaye effect is…

  • Bouncing and Break-Up

    In the collage above, successive frames showing the bouncing and break-up of liquid droplets impacting a solid inclined surface coated with a thin layer of high-viscosity fluid have been superposed. This allows one to see the trajectory and deformation of the original droplet as well as its daughter droplets. The impacts vary by Weber number,…

  • Saffman-Taylor Demo

    In this video, a thin film of viscous glycerin sits between two glass plates. As the plates are forced apart, air gets entrained from either side, causing finger-like instabilities to form between the two fluids. This is a result of the Saffman-Taylor mechanism. The final dendritic pattern depends on the fluid viscosities, surface tension, and…