Nicole Sharp
Nicole Sharp

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

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  • Paris 2024: Beach Versus Indoor Volleyballs

    Some of the differences between beach volleyball and indoor volleyball are obvious, like the number of players allowed — two versus six — and the courts — a smaller sand court versus a bigger indoor court. But there are subtle and significant differences in the balls themselves. Both beach and indoor volleyballs used for competition…

  • Paris 2024: Cycling in Crosswinds

    Wind plays a major role in cycling, since aerodynamic drag is the greatest force hampering a cyclist. In road racing, both individual cyclists and teams use tactics that vary based on the wind speed and direction. Crosswinds — when the apparent wind comes from the side in the cyclist’s point of view — are some…

  • Paris 2024: Coordinating the Front-Crawl

    Of all the swimming strokes humans have invented, none is faster or more efficient than the front-crawl. That’s why all competitors use it in freestyle events, and why it’s the only stroke that appears in races longer than 200 meters. But elite swimmers don’t perform the front-crawl the same way in a sprint as they…

  • Paris 2024: Bouncing and Spinning

    Spin, or the lack thereof, plays a major role in many sports — including tennis, golf, football, baseball, volleyball, and table tennis — because it affects whether flow stays attached around a ball, as well as how much lift or side force a ball gets. A ball’s spin doesn’t stay constant, however. During flight, a…

  • Paris 2024: Triathlon Swimming

    Unlike the swimming competition, Olympic triathletes complete their swim legs in open waters. There are no lane dividers and no rules against drafting off a fellow athlete. Curious to see how draft positioning could affect swimmers, researchers experimented with swimmer-shaped models in a water channel and a numerical simulation. They found that the most advantageous…

  • Paris 2024: Swimsuit Tech

    The aughts were an exciting time to watch competitive swimming. Records were falling left and right, especially in 2008 and 2009. The first wave of improvements came around 2000, with the introduction of full-body swimwear. According to one analysis, men’s freestyle swimming performances improved by about 1% with that change. The next big leap came…

  • Hand-Making Artist-Grade Pastels

    I’m constantly fascinated by the intersections of art and fluid mechanics. In this video, we get an inside look at a French atelier making artist-grade pastels using centuries-old methods. And although the final product doesn’t appear to have much to do with fluids — compared to, say, paint — the process behind each pastel involves…

  • Hole Punch Clouds

    At times altocumulus cloud cover is pierced by circular or elongated holes, filled only with the wispiest of virga. These odd holes are known by many names: cavum, fallstreak holes, and hole punch clouds. Long-running debates about these clouds’ origins were put to rest some 14 years ago, after scientists showed they were triggered by…

  • Junggar Basin Aglow

    The low sun angle in this astronaut photo of Junggar Basin shows off the wind- and water-carved landscape. Located in northwestern China, this region is covered in dune fields, appearing along the top and bottom of the image. The uplifted area in the top half of the image is separated by sedimentary layers that lie…

  • “Stomp-Rocket”: A New Type of Eruption

    When Kilauea‘s caldera collapsed in 2018, it came with a sequence of 12 closely-timed eruptions that did not match either of the typical volcanic eruption types. Usually, eruptions are either magmatic — caused by rising magma — or phreatic — caused by groundwater flash-boiling into steam. The data from Kilauea matched neither type. Instead, scientists…