Category: Research

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    Playing Pac-Man with Water Droplets

    The vibrations of a plate in the horizontal and vertical directions can be used to control the motion of a drop placed on the surface. Here a droplet of water on a superhydrophobic surface is controlled by joystick a la Pacman. For more, see papers here and here.

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    Visualizing Fish Wakes

    This novel flow visualization technique uses dilute solutions of the tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). These rod-shaped particles align with shear and produce a birefringent interference pattern visible when viewed between crossed polarizing filters. The intensity of the light is related to the magnitude of shear. The technique is benign to the fish but enables researchers to see fluid motion around fish that other techniques cannot capture. #

  • The Disintegrating Bowl

    The Disintegrating Bowl

    A viscous fluid droplet impacts a thin layer of ethanol, which has a lower surface tension than the viscous fluid. A spray of tiny ethanol droplets is thrown up while a bowl-shaped crown of the viscous fluid forms. As the ethanol droplets impact the bowl, the lower surface tension of the ethanol causes fluid to flow away from points of contact due to the Marangoni effect. This outflow causes holes to form in the crown, forming a network of thin fluid ligaments. For more, see this paper (PDF) and video. (Photo credit: S.T. Thoroddson et al)

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    Mapping Flames

    Combustion remains a fascinating and only partially understood phenomenon. Here scientists work to map a flame in three dimensions using high-speed cameras and digital reconstruction. (submitted by Chi M)

  • Jump Rope Aerodynamics

    Jump Rope Aerodynamics

    Researchers have used high-speed video and numerical simulation to capture the effects of aerodynamics on jump roping. After videoing an athlete jumping rope and constructing a jump roping robot (shown above imaged multiple times with a strobe light), they found that the U-shaped tip of the jump rope bends away from the direction of motion. When they built a computer model capable of deforming the jump rope based on its drag, they found the same behavior. They concluded that the “best” jump ropes are lightweight, short, and have small diameters to maximize speed and minimize the drag. #

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    Airfoil Soap Flow

    A flapping airfoil in a vertically flowing soap film produces six vortices per cycle. The vortices form a pattern of two vortex pairs separated by vortex singlets. In the wake of the foil, they advect relative to one another due to their mutual influence, as if dancing. #

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    Air Injection Patterns

    This timelapse video demonstrates the pattern variations occurring when air is injected into a wet granular mixture in a Hele-Shaw cell. When the filling fraction–the percentage of the total volume between the glass sheets taken up by grains–is relatively small, the pattern formed by the injected air develops continuously and looks similar to Saffman-Taylor fingering seen in pure fluids. When the filling fraction is larger, however, the pattern forms in an intermittent fashion with new stick-slip bubbles of air forming as narrow sections of granular material slip and give way. #

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    Voyager Explores the Edge of the Solar System

    Though unconventional by our terrestrial concepts of fluids, the solar wind and its interaction with objects in and around our solar system can be considered a form of fluid dynamics. This NASA video discusses discoveries made by the Voyager spacecrafts as they leave our solar system and pass into interstellar space. The solar wind, a rarefied stream of charged particles, streams outward from the Sun at supersonic speeds. Eventually, the pressure from the interstellar medium surrounding the solar system is sufficient to slow the solar wind to subsonic speeds, causing a termination shock much like the hydraulic jump that forms in a kitchen sink when you turn the faucet on.

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    Bullet Shock Wave and Cavitation

    A 9mm bullet impacts a falling jet of water. High-speed video reveals the formation of a shock wave inside the jet. Because this shock wave is confined inside the jet, it causes strong secondary cavitation–the bubble that seems to explode in front of the bullet.

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    How Scramjets Work

    The scramjet–supersonic combustion ramjet–engine has been a holy grail of aerospace engineering for 50 years. It is an air-breathing engine with no moving parts capable of propelling crafts at hypersonic speeds beyond Mach 5. As indicated in the name, combustion in the scramjet occurs at supersonic speeds, where the heating due to air compression is sufficient to ignite fuel when injected into the engine. At present the record for the highest speed attained in scramjet flight is held by the NASA X-43A, which reached Mach 9.8 in 2004 after about 10 seconds of scramjet free-flight. The longest scramjet flight belongs to the Boeing X-51 Waverider with 140 seconds of burn time in a 2010 test flight. Few tests of these experimental hypersonic crafts have been completely successful; they represent the frontier of aerospace technology.