- Profile
Switchable Explosives
Explosives are used in many fields, including mining and demolition, but storing these devices is difficult and dangerous. Hundreds of accidents — many resulting in fatalities — have happened over the decades, simply because there is no true “off-switch” for explosive devices. But a group out of Los Alamos believe they’ve changed that. Using 3D-printing,…
Anchoring Mussels
Mussels live in rough conditions, constantly pummeled by waves and turbulent currents. They hold themselves fast in the flow using dozens of byssel threads (commonly called a mussel’s beard) that anchor them to rocks and other mussels. The threads get built within the mussel’s foot, the tongue-like protrusion mussels use to drag themselves. The threads…
Polygonal Jumps
When you turn on your kitchen faucet, you may have noticed a big circle that forms on the bottom of the sink. This is a hydraulic jump, a region where fast-moving, shallow flow shifts to a slower-moving, deeper flow. Although these jumps start out circular, if the fluid is deeper than a critical value, the…
Walking in the Wake of a Cylinder
A cylinder in a flow produces a series of alternating vortices known as a von Karman vortex street. Changing the flow speed and rotating the cylinder both allow researchers to tune the frequency of these shed vortices. What happens to an object in the wake? For a simple hydrofoil tethered to the cylinder, the object…
100 For the Ocean
One hundred photographers of all genres are coming together this month to raise money for ocean conservation in “100 For the Ocean.” Through the end of this month, they’re selling prints of these and other images, starting at $100 apiece. All proceeds will go to ocean conservation. Check out all the prints here, and if…
Flow Over an AT-AT
Having previously examined the re-entry characteristics of an X-Wing, a group of engineers are back to look at Imperial vehicle physics. In this poster, they look at what happens to the AT-AT walker when strong crosswinds, like those seen in the Battle of Hoth, blow across the vehicle’s path. Given its boxy body and gangly…
Giant Droplet Splashes
When droplets get larger than 0.27 cm, they no longer stay spherical as they fall. Here, researchers look at very large droplets (equivalent to 3.06 cm in diameter) falling into water. On their way to the pool, the droplets oscillate — some lengthening, some flattening, and some bulging into a bag. The droplet’s shape at…
Honeybee Feeding
Busy bees feed on millions of flowers for each kilogram of honey they produce. To gather nectar, bees use their hairy tongues, which project out of a sheath-like cover. Protraction (i.e., sticking their tongue out) is relatively fast because all the hairs on the tongue initially lie flat. In the nectar, those hairs flare out,…
Ominous Mammatus
Mammatus clouds are fairly unusual and often look quite dramatic. Most clouds have flat bottoms, caused by the specific height and temperature at which their droplets condense. But mammatus clouds have bubble-like bottoms that are thought to form when large droplets of water or ice sink as they evaporate. Although they can occur in the…
Snow-Covered Trees
In the Hakkōda Mountains of Japan, snow encases the trees, transforming the ski slopes into a hoodoo-filled winter wonderland. Photographer Sho Shibata captured these images while journeying through the area a few years ago. The combination of wind and snow sculpts the trees into surprisingly similar shapes! (Image credit: S. Shibata; via Colossal)