Search results for: “art”

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    Breaking Ocean Currents

    Our global ocean currents move enough water to dwarf the flow of all Earth’s rivers. This worldwide circulation is driven largely by density and the movements of cold, salty water versus warmer, fresher water. The pump behind this action lies in the North Atlantic, where cold, salty water sinks down in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, or AMOC. Among other things, AMOC is responsible for Western Europe’s relatively mild climate compared to similarly northern lands.

    Unfortunately, as our world warms, AMOC gets weaker. That means less cold water sinking in the North Atlantic and a smaller driving force behind global oceanic circulation. There is even a small but real chance that global warming breaks our ocean current system entirely and drastically changes climates around the world in ways that cannot be easily fixed. Watch the full video to learn more. (Video and image credit: It’s Okay To Be Smart)

  • Predicting Meteotsunamis

    Predicting Meteotsunamis

    Meteotsunamis, or meteorological tsunamis, are large waves driven by weather rather than seismic energy. Although they occur along shorelines throughout the world, forecasters have very little infrastructure in place to predict or detect them. But a new study of an April 2018 meteotsunami on Lake Michigan (pictured above) has provided evidence that existing models may be able to forecast these events.

    The Lake Michigan meteotsunami was driven by an atmospheric gravity wave, which carried with it a substantial pressure drop. Most of the time such waves travel faster or slower than water waves, and there is little to no interaction. But on this day, the atmospheric wave and the water waves were traveling at the same speed in the same direction, creating a resonance that strengthened the water wave.

    Using existing National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) models, researchers were able to reconstruct the event digitally, with results that agreed well with observations. That success means that forecasters may be able to predict the events ahead of time, potentially saving lives. (Image credit: D. Maglothin; research credit: E. Anderson and G. Mann; via Gizmodo)

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    “Le Temps et l’Espace”

    Filmmaker Thomas Blanchard creates a slow and dreamy fluid landscape in “Le Temps et l’Espace”. Made with ink and paints, the visuals are beautiful and serene. For similar works, be sure to check out the “fluids as art” tag! (Image and video credit: T. Blanchard)

  • Snail Locomotion

    Snail Locomotion

    Snails and other gastropods move using their single muscular foot and a viscoelastic fluid they secrete. Muscular waves in the foot run from tail to head and are transmitted to the ground through the thin, sticky mucus layer without the snail ever fully detaching from the surface. The characteristics of this mucus layer are critical to the snail’s locomotion. As a movement cycle begins, the mucus behaves like an elastic solid. As the muscular wave approaches, it shears the fluid, increasing its stress and ultimately reaching the yield point, where the gel begins to flow. Once the wave passes, the mucus quickly transitions back to its elastic solid behavior. The net result of each cycle is an asymmetric force that propels the snail forward while keeping it adhered to whatever surface it’s crawling on.

    Many animals rely on similarly complex fluids to move, attack prey, defend against predators, or enable their reproduction. Check out this review article for more examples. (Image credit: A. Perry; see also P. Rühs et al.; submitted by Pascal B.)

  • Jovian Auroras

    Jovian Auroras

    Like Earth, Jupiter is home to polar auroras that light the sky as charged particles interact with the planet’s magnetosphere. A recent paper identifies interesting features in the aurora that appear similar to expanding vortex rings (see inset below). Although the researchers cannot yet identify the origin of the rings, they hypothesize that the process begins at the far edges of Jupiter’s magnetosphere where it interacts with the incoming solar wind. One theory posits that shear flows and Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities where the magnetosphere and solar wind meet drive the phenomenon. (Image credit: Jupiter – NASA, ESA, and J. Nichols, aurora features – NASA/SWRI/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/V. Hue/G. R. Gladstone/B. Bonfond; research credit: V. Hue et al.; via Gizmodo)

    Diagram showing an inset of Jupiter's northern aurora, with further insets showing the expanding ring features.
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    Flying Spiders Use Electric Fields

    Many species of spider fly with a technique calling ballooning. We’ve touched on spider flight before, but more recent research adds a new dimension to the phenomenon. Researchers showed that spiders can actually use electrical fields in their flight. When isolated from flow or outside electrical fields, researchers found that spiders would still begin ballooning behaviors when subjected to electrical fields similar to those found in nature. The spiders were even able to take off in the artificial environment, using the electrostatic force between the surrounding fields and their negatively charged silk strands. While electrical fields alone were enough to get spiders aloft, the team thinks spiders in nature likely still use a combination of electrostatic force and aerodynamic drag in order to travel the vast distances spiders have been known to cover. (Video and image credit: BBC; research credit: E. Morley and D. Robert)

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    “The Golden Sutra”

    “The Golden Sutra” is an homage to the colors of Buddhism, specifically the Longzangjing scripture illustrated in yellow, red, green, blue, and white with letters of gold. Artist Roman De Giuli captures some incredible fluid eddies and streaks with ink, paint, and glitter on paper. (Image and video credit: R. De Giuli)

  • Airborne Aerosol Transmission of COVID-19

    Airborne Aerosol Transmission of COVID-19

    Early in the COVID-19 pandemic health officials resisted the idea that the novel coronavirus was transmissible through tiny aerosol droplets rather than larger, non-buoyant droplets. One case that made headlines and helped shift opinion was that of an outbreak among patrons of a Guangzhou restaurant traced to a single, pre-symptomatic patient zero. The pattern of who became sick at the carrier’s table and those nearby made little sense unless the restaurant’s air flow played a role in spreading the virus.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WaZiCqQmO4g

    This paper studies the incident in detail, using an in-house computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code to simulate both airflow in the restaurant and the paths aerosol droplets would follow in that environment. It takes into account flow from the air conditioner and the warm air rising from customers. The study’s predictions of which areas would have the highest concentrations of virus-laden aerosols matches well with the actual pattern of the outbreak. The authors hope that tools like theirs can help prevent future outbreaks by indicating the most dangerous paths for transmission and measures that can block those. (Image credit: Center for Disease Control; video, research, and submission credit: H. Liu et al.)

  • Meeting Without Mixing

    Meeting Without Mixing

    When bodies of water meet, they don’t always mix right away. Here we see the confluence of the Back and Hayes Rivers in the Canadian Arctic. The Back River appears as a darker blue-green color compared to the light turquoise Hayes River. The different colors reflect the levels of algae and sediment carried in their waters. As seen in both the aerial and satellite photos here, there’s a distinct line where the two waters meet without mixing, and that line persists for kilometers beyond their initial confluence. Typically, this lack of mixing between bodies of water is caused by differences in temperature, salinity, and turbidity (amount of sediment) that make the density of each river’s water different. (Image credit: top – R. Macdonald/Univ. of Manitoba, bottom – J. Stevens/USGS; via NASA Earth Observatory)

    A satellite photo of the Back and Hayes Rivers shows their distinctly different colors persisting for 10+ kilometers after their confluence.
  • How the Hummingbird Got Its Hum

    How the Hummingbird Got Its Hum

    Summer hikes in the Rocky Mountains are frequently pierced by a hum that can deepen to a bomber-like buzz as hummingbirds flit by. They’re so small and fast that they’re hard to see, but they’re never hard to hear. A new study pins down just where that telltale hum comes from.

    To determine the specific origin of the hummingbird’s sound, researchers observed hovering hummingbirds with an array of over 2,000 microphones and multiple high-speed cameras. With this set-up, they could create a 3D acoustic map of the bird’s sounds, correlated with its motions. They found that the bird’s sounds come primarily from aerodynamic forces generated during their distinctive wingstroke – not from vortices or the fluttering of their feathers.

    They also found that the hummingbird’s fast wingstroke — about 40 times per second — fed into sounds at 40 and 80 Hz, as well as higher frequency overtones. Since these sounds are well within human hearing range, they make up most of what we hear from the birds. (Image credit: P. Bonnar; research credit: B. Hightower; via The Guardian; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)