Nicole Sharp
Nicole Sharp

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

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  • Dancing Plasma

    Two dark areas of plasma, cooler than the surrounding fluid, dance and intertwine above the sun’s surface. Plasma, a rarefied gas made up of ions, is an electrically conductive fluid, shaped here by the magnetic field of the sun. Note how the strands pass material back and forth along the magnetic field lines. This timelapse…

  • Rogue Wave Recreated

    For years, mariners have reported occurrences of rogue waves–sudden, isolated waves many times larger than the surrounding surface waves. Until 1995, when a rogue wave was first measured, debate raged as to whether such waves even existed. Scientists have since agreed that nonlinear models of wave interaction are the most likely source of the amplification…

  • Volcanic Clouds

    The volcano Tungurahua erupts in a cloud of ash while molten lava flows down the mountain’s sides. Overhead a wispy lenticular cloud has formed where moist air flowing over the volcano dropped below its dew point. Volcanic eruptions have been known to produce shock waves and vortex rings as well as their distinctive turbulent plumes. (submitted by A. Jones…

  • Brine Shrimp Swimming

    For small creatures, swimming is dominated by viscosity. Here researchers use particle image velocimetry (PIV) to explore the flow field around brine shrimp. Its motion is divided into two vorticity-generating phases–the wide power stroke where the shrimp generates most of its forward motion and the recovery stroke where the shrimp returns its starting position while…

  • Granular Eruptions

    Granular flows, which are made up of loose particles like sand, often display remarkably fluid-like behavior. Here researchers explore the behavior of granular flows when a solid impacts them at high speed. The sand, unlike a fluid, does not have surface tension, yet we still observe many of the same behaviors. Like a fluid, the sand…

  • Tornadogenesis

    Tornadogenesis–the formation of tornadoes–remains a topic of active research as there is relatively little direct experimental data, owing to the difficulty of prediction as well as measurement. Initially, a variation of wind speed at different altitudes in the atmosphere causes shearing, which can lead to the formation of a horizontal column of rotating air–a vortex…

  • Plumes Driven by Chemistry

    This timelapse video shows the formation and steady-state behavior of a buoyancy-driven plume created by a chemical reaction. As the plume accelerates upward, it develops a head, which in some cases detaches from the plume in the form of a vortex ring. A new head then develops before also detaching and accelerating upwards. (Video credit:…

  • Squeezing Bubbles

    An air bubble trapped inside a viscoelastic fluid is squeezed between two plates in this video, revealing a Saffman-Taylor-like fingering instability stemming from local stress concentrations. (Video credit: Baudouin Saintyves)

  • Winds Across the US

    A collaborative project on data visualization brings to life the wind velocity data across the United States.  The Wind Map is an interactive, nearly real-time indicator of wind conditions across the country, compiled on an hourly basis from the National Digital Forecast Database.  Be sure to click through to see the data in motion. Observing the…

  • Micro Air Vehicle Flow Viz

    A smoke wire shows the deformation of streamlines around a swept-winged micro air vehicle (MAV). These crafts typically feature wingspans smaller than one foot and, thus, never develop the type of flow fields associated with larger fixed-wing airplanes. This complicates theoretical predictions of lift and drag for MAVs as well as making them difficult to…