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Top Posts of 2023

Written by

Nicole Sharp

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One theory suggests that much of the Sphinx formed naturally via erosion and ancient Egyptians carved features onto the formation.
At over 24g, the acceleration is enough to dislodge the water from this artificial ear canal. But accelerations this high can cause brain damage.
Can water solve a maze?
Dandelion seeds release for a preferred wind direction.
Silke Weinfurtner alongside the apparatus she and her students use to simulate black hole physics.
Dye on the right half of this image shows a complex mixing pattern. On the left half, where dye was not introduced, concentrations of bacteria are highest in the areas with strong mixing.
Poster illustrating what happens underwater when a drop hits a pool.
A droplet hits a hot surface and immediately starts boiling.
Laser illumination reveals the plume of aerosol particles from the flush of a typical public toilet.
Exascale simulations.
The Vistula River (Wisla) floodplain near Szczucin, Poland.
Blood flow in a fish's fin.
A snake and its tracks.
Messier 8, the Lagoon Nebula.
Flames propagating. Image appears in "Chaosmosis," a traveling gallery of fluid art.
←Bullet Versus Explosion
Marbling Hydrodynamics→

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