Nicole Sharp
Nicole Sharp

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

4,153 posts
343 followers
  • Jet Breakup

    As a laminar column of water falls, slight perturbations cause waviness in the stream. Whenever the radius of the stream decreases, the pressure due to surface tension increases, causing fluid to flow away from the area of smaller radius. This outflow decreases the radius further and drives the stream to break into droplets. The mechanism is called the…

  • Welcome!

    I’d like to extend a special welcome to all our new followers here at FYFD. It’s been an exciting week since getting featured in the Tumblr Spotlight! In general, we try to bring you new fluid mechanical tidbits every weekday, but we also accept submissions and user questions, so if you’ve seen something cool online that’s…

  • Astronomical Jets

    Researchers have pieced together Hubble images of jets from newborn stars into timelapse movies that reveal the interstellar fluid mechanics responsible for the formation of stars like our sun. These jets stream out clumps of matter that has fallen on the new star. When faster moving eddies impact slower ones, bow shocks can form, much…

  • Toroidal Vortex

    When instabilities exist in laminar flow, they do not always lead immediately to turbulence. In this video, a viscous fluid fills the space between two concentric cylinders. As the inner cylinder rotates, a linear velocity profile (as viewed from above) forms; this is known as Taylor-Couette flow. If any tiny perturbations are added to that…

  • “Compressed 02”

    This timelapse video shows the spreading of food coloring and a ferrofluid through soap suds surrounding a magnet. Capillary action, the same force that enables sap to flow up through a tree against gravity, helps draw the fluids through the interfaces between the soap bubbles without disturbing the suds. The magnet’s field provides a preferred…

  • Aircraft Contrails

    [original media no longer available] Under the right atmospheric conditions, condensation can form, even at low speeds, as moist air is accelerated over airplane wings. This acceleration causes a local drop in pressure and temperature, which can cause water vapor in the air to condense. The condensation can sometimes get pulled into the wingtip vortices…

  • Hurricane Irene

    This August 25th satellite image shows Hurricane Irene over the Bahamas and Florida. Hurricanes are fueled largely by the release of heat as warm water vapor in the rising air condenses. The hurricane requires a body of warm water to sustain the process, which is why hurricanes weaken drastically after they make landfall. Over open…

  • The Barus Effect

    Non-Newtonian fluids are full of all kinds of unusual behaviors. Here a highly viscoelastic non-Newtonian fluid exhibits the Barus effect, in which extruding the fluid causes the falling jet to swell to several times larger than the diameter of the opening through which it was extruded. This is caused by the stretching and relaxation of…

  • Bursting Bubbles

    A soap bubble bursts when its surface tension is broken, and, although from our perspective, the bubble bursts instantly, the process is actually directional. The bubble disintegrates from the point of contact outward. See it in high-speed video here or see more photos here. (Photo credit: Richard Heeks) #

  • Sound and Harmonics

    The vibrations we perceive as sound, whether in air, water, or any other fluid, are tiny pressure waves emanating from a source, transmitting like ripples across a pond, and finally being caught by our ears and translated by our brains. In this video, the mechanisms and mathematics of sound and harmonics are explained. Although we’re…