Nicole Sharp
Nicole Sharp

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

4,126 posts
334 followers
  • Liquid Lace

    3D printers are a neat apparatus for exploring flow instabilities. If too much material is extruded compared to the speed of the printer head, coiling takes place. But under-extrusion creates patterns, too. Here, researchers show how under-extrusion can create a stable lace-like pattern. Once dried, the material can stretch, but only in certain directions, a…

  • “High Flow”

    Roman De Giuli’s “High Flow” is vibrant and energetic. Colorful paints and inks flow across the page, creating complex patterns. I love the blossoming flows, feathery fronds, and spreading Marangoni effects. De Giuli’s films never disappoint! (Video and image credit: R. De Giuli)

  • Water Jumping Hoops

    Small creatures like springtails and spiders can jump off the air-water interface using surface tension. But larger creatures can water-jump, too, using drag. Here, researchers study drag-based water jumping with a simple elastic hoop. Initially, two sides of the hoop are pulled closer by a string, deforming the hoop. Then, with the hoop sitting upright…

  • Miniature Ice Stupas

    Ice stupas are conical artificial glaciers built with snow cannons; they’re used to store water for spring irrigation. Here, researchers explore a miniaturized lab-grown version made from atomized water droplets. The growing drop breaks and spills, forming frozen fingers in all directions. Further drops flow and freeze as rivulets atop the stupa — or they…

  • Drying Unaffected by Humidity

    Water evaporates faster in dry conditions than in humid ones, but the same isn’t true of paint. Instead, paint’s drying time is largely independent of the day’s humidity. That’s because of paint’s long chains of polymers. As water in the paint evaporates, these polymers are drawn to the surface, forming a viscoelastic layer that hinders…

  • “Coat or Collapse?”

    Imagine a layer of particles sitting at the interface between oil and water. Known as a granular raft, these particles can interact in interesting ways with other objects. Here, researchers experiment with allowing different shapes to fall through the raft. At slow speeds, the raft deforms to coat the object, even if it has a…

  • “Alive”

    In “Alive,” filmmaker Christopher Dormoy explores acrylic paints and the variety of ways in which the medium can be used. From a fluids perspective, there’s dripping, viscous flow, turbulent eddies, billowing plumes, and “accidental painting” due to density-driven instabilities. It’s a fun tour of fluid phenomena in art. What examples do you spot? (Video and…

  • Thermal Slipping

    A particle suspended in a liquid typically jitters haphazardly about as it’s struck randomly by nearby liquid molecules. But when a temperature gradient is applied to the liquid, that random motion instead becomes directional. In a recent study, researchers directly mapped the motions underlying this thermophoresis. In their experiment, the team placed a 7-micron sphere…

  • Beneath the Surface

    Signs of a ship’s passage can persist long after it’s gone. The churn of its propellers and the oil leaked from its engines leave a mark on the water’s surface that, in some cases, is visible even from orbit. But the frothy wake of a ship is no easy place to measure; there are simply…

  • Frictional Fingers

    Air pushes into a thin gap filled with water and granular particles in the labyrinth-like image above. The encroaching air pushes grains like a bulldozer’s blade, building up a compacted wall. The invasion continues until the pressure of the air is countered by the combined capillary and frictional forces of the wet grains. Researchers built…