Nicole Sharp
Nicole Sharp

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

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  • “Emerald and Stone”

    “Emerald and Stone” is filmmaker Thomas Blanchard’s tribute to the music of Brian Eno. The short film is made, as Blanchard puts it, with “inks and painting,” but I suspect there’s some oil in there, too, to coat the droplets we see. Much of the movement is likely driven by surface tension variations in the…

  • Modeling Wildfires With Water

    Turbulence over a burning forest can carry embers that spread the wildfire. To understand how wildfire plumes interact with the natural turbulence found above the forest canopy, researchers modeled the situation in a water flume. Dowel rods acted as a forest, with turbulence developing naturally from the water flowing past. For a wildfire, the researchers…

  • Clouds Down Under

    This large and unusual cloud formation was captured one July morning over western Australia. Stretching over 1,000 kilometers, the clouds have interesting features at both the large and small scale. The small-scale ripples within the clouds are gravity waves triggered by the terrain below. The larger, arced features are tougher to explain, though they may…

  • Predicting Landslides

    Landslides can cause catastrophic damage, but historically it’s been difficult to monitor susceptible slopes and predict when they’ll fail. But a recent study looking at the 2017 Mud Creek landslide in California shows that new methods could provide a heads up. The researchers used satellite data from the months preceding the landslide to study how…

  • To Clog or Not to Clog?

    The clear plastic disks use to study clogging appear rather plain — at least until you look at them through polarizers. Then the disks light up with a web of lines that reveal the unseen forces between the particles. In this video, researchers use this trick to explore how spontaneous clogs occur. If particles jam…

  • “Vorticity 5”

    Photographer and stormchaser extraordinaire Mike Olbinski is back with the fifth volume in his “Vorticity” series. Shot over the 2022 and 2023 tornado seasons in the U.S. Central Plains, this edition has virtually everything: supercells, microbursts, lightning, tornadoes, and haboobs. There’s towering convection and churning, swirling turbulence. It’s a spectacular look at the power and…

  • Forming Zigzags

    Scientists are fascinated by the organized patterns that can emerge from non-living systems. Here, researchers study micron-sized magnetic particles, immersed in a viscoelastic fluid and subjected to an oscillating magnetic field. The peanut-shaped particles roll around their long axis and assemble to form millimeter-sized bands of zigzags. These patterns, the researchers found, do not depend…

  • Painting in Sediment

    Pale plumes of sediment flow off these islands in the Gulf of Mannar between India and Sri Lanka. As waves erode the land, currents and tides carry the sediment outward, shaping it into swirls and eddies. I rarely tire of satellite images like these because there are always subtle new details of flow to notice.…

  • Uranus’s Polar Cyclone

    Uranus is an oddity among the planets of our solar system. Where other planets spin around an axis roughly in line with their orbital axis, Uranus spins on its side, placing its poles in line with the sun. On Earth, the polar regions are naturally colder the equator, but that doesn’t hold true for Uranus.…

  • The Destructive Power of a Blank

    Removing the slug does not make a bullet harmless, as the Slow Mo Guys demonstrate in this video. They’re shooting blanks — casings that still contain propellant but no projectile. There’s still more than enough force to obliterate an egg, lunch meat, and water balloons. You really don’t want one of these fired near you.…