Nicole Sharp
Nicole Sharp

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

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  • “FLOW”

    We live in a world of fluids. We breathe them, move through them, and have them move in us. “FLOW” is a celebration of that pervasive motion, animated from hand-drawn artwork. It features fluid dynamics from our daily lives — a candle’s flame, breaking waves, pedestrian traffic — all the way to astronomical scales far…

  • A Bubble’s Path

    Centuries ago, Leonardo da Vinci noticed something peculiar about bubbles rising through water. Small bubbles followed a straight path, but slightly larger ones swung back and forth or corkscrewed upward. The mechanism behind this behavior has been a matter of debate ever since, but the authors of a recent study believe they’ve nailed down the…

  • Leidenfrost Explosion

    When a water drop hits a surface that’s much hotter than its boiling point, part of it will vaporize immediately. Depending on the temperature, this Leidenfrost effect can be a relatively gentle process — or not. Here, the surface is so hot that the entire drop is boiling before it’s even finished spreading from impact.…

  • The Chicxulub Impact’s Tsunami

    66 million years ago an asteroid struck offshore of what is now Chicxulub near the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico. The impact and its aftermath are widely credited with a mass extinction that wiped out 75% of plant and animal life on Earth, including non-avian dinosaurs. Since the impact occurred in shallow waters, it also generated…

  • A Look at Hagfish

    Hagfish are the lords of slime. Their viscoelastic protection mechanism is so effective that they’ve hardly changed up their game in the past 300 million years. Instead, at the first sign of trouble, they release a mucus that rapidly expands in salt water. When attacking fish try to pull water into their gills, they get…

  • Optimal Bubble Clusters

    With a bubble wand, it’s quite easy to create clusters of two or more soap bubbles. These clusters seem to instantly find the lowest energy state, forming a shape that minimizes the cluster’s surface area (including interior walls) for the volume of air they enclose. But mathematicians have struggled for thousands of years to prove…

  • Dandelion Seeds

    Each seed on the head of a dandelion has a preferred wind direction, according to new research. Seeds facing the breeze are most likely to release from the head, with those facing other directions holding on tens to hundreds of times harder — until their breeze comes along. To measure the force needed to pluck…

  • Turning the Beach Pink

    Lab experiments and numerical simulations can only take us so far; sometimes there’s no substitute for getting out into the field. That’s why a beach in San Diego turned pink this January and February, as researchers released a safe, non-toxic dye into an estuary. The goal is to understand how small freshwater sources mix with…

  • The Optical Atom

    Researchers applied a quantum mechanical technique to study an evaporating drop in extreme detail. The team trapped a spherical water drop and collected the light scattered off it as it evaporated. Using an analytic technique originally developed for an atom, they were able to study changes in the drop down to the nanometric level without…

  • Racing Dunes

    The deserts of Namibia are home to some of the fastest and most consistent winds in the world. As a result, they’re also home to some of the fastest-moving dunes on Earth. Dunes are shaped and moved by the wind, which pushes sand up the dune’s windward side and dumps it down the leeward side.…