Nicole Sharp
Nicole Sharp

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

4,099 posts
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  • Wingtip Vortices in Ground Effect

    In this flow visualization, wingtip vortices from an aircraft have been simulated using an apparatus with a couple of flaps that snap together like a book closing. Dye is pooled on the “ground” below the flaps and gets entrained by the vortices and lit up using laser light. The red vortices are the primary vortex…

  • Paper Plane Physics

    [original media unavailable] It’s a little surprising that this would be so stable, but I don’t have any reason to believe it impossible. #

  • Wild Ferrofluid Shapes

    In this fluid experiment, a ferrofluid–typically a liquid with a suspension of ferric particles–is exposed to rotating magnetic fields, which results in some wild shapes. #

  • Benard Cells

    When a fluid in a gravitational field is heated from below, it can develop a Rayleigh-Benard instability which causes the formation of convection cells as in the video above. The hexagonal shape of the cells is due to the boundary conditions of the fluid. It’s possible to form other shapes like spirals. The same mechanism…

  • Human-Powered Ornithopter

    A team at the University of Toronto has flown the world’s first human-powered ornithopter, an aircraft that flies by flapping its wings like a bird. The concept dates back all the way to Da Vinci in the 15th century. Part of why it’s taken centuries to realize the dream is that bird flight is much…

  • Breaking up in Crossflow

    This video shows some instabilities that occur when a liquid jet impinges on a flowing cross stream. Note how the jet breaks down into droplets in a fashion similar to the Plateau-Rayleigh instability but the broken tip remains stable for some time thereafter. #

  • Supersonic

    Moving supersonically–faster than the local speed of sound–can cause some awesome effects. Among these are vapor cones (a.k.a. Prandlt-Glauert singularities), shock waves, and, of course, the sonic boom.

  • Magnetohydrodynamics

    Fluid dynamics play an important role in understanding phenomena like sunspots and solar prominences. The subfield of fluid dynamics concerned with the motion of electrically conducting fluids, like the plasma that makes up the sun’s corona, is magnetohydrodynamics.

  • How to Blow Bubble Rings

    Next time you’re at the pool, join the dolphins, moss, and volcanoes in blowing vortex rings. Here’s how: first, squeeze your lips like you’re going to give someone a kiss. Second, increase the air pressure in your mouth. Then quickly open and close your lips so a small amount of air pops out. It can…

  • Mentos & Diet Coke in Microgravity

    For a little Friday fun, consider this microgravity experiment conducted aboard the infamous Vomit Comet:  what happens when you combine Diet Coke and Mentos in microgravity? For the record, I think this is the answer. (Via jshoer, who will be flying on the Vomit Comet in 2 weeks – but sadly not with a fluids…