Cavitation happens when the local pressure in a liquid drops below its vapor pressure. A low-pressure bubble forms, typically very briefly, when this occurs. These bubbles are spherical unless they form near a surface. In that case, the bubbles take on a flatter, oblong shape. As they collapse, the bubbles form a jet, like the one seen inside the bubble above. The jet extends through the bubble and stretches into a funnel shaped protrusion on the bubble’s far side. Eventually, the whole shape becomes unstable and breaks into many smaller bubbles. Shock waves can be generated in the collapse, too; often the jet generates at least two in addition to the ones created when the bubble reaches its minimum size. This is part of why cavitation can be so destructive near a surface. (Image credit: L. Crum)
Search results for: “high-speed video”

Blue Man Group in Slow Mo
In their latest video, the Slow Mo Guys team up with the Blue Man Group for some high-speed hijinks, some of which make for great fluidsy visuals. Their first experiment involves dropping a bowling ball on gelatin. The gelatin goes through some massive deformation but comes out remarkably unscathed. Gelatin is what is known as a colloid and essentially consists of water trapped in a matrix of protein molecules. This gives it both solid and liquid-like properties, which means that the energy the bowling ball’s impact imparts can be dissipated through liquid-like waves ricocheting through the gelatin before the elasticity of the protein matrix allows it to reform in its original shape.
The video ends with buckets of paint flung at Dan. The paints form beautiful splash sheets that expand and thin until surface tension can no longer hold them together. Holes form in the sheet and eat outward until the paint forms thin ligaments and catenaries. As those continue to stretch, surface tension drives the paint to break into droplets, though that break-up may be countered to some extent by any viscoelastic properties of the paint. (Image and video credit: The Slow Mo Guys + Blue Man Group, source)

A Water Balloon on a Bed of Nails
If you dropped a water balloon on a bed of nails, you’d expect it to burst spectacularly. And you’d be right – some of the time. Under the right conditions, though, you’d see what a high-speed camera caught in the animation above: a pancake-shaped bounce with nary a leak. Physically, this is a scaled-up version of what happens to a water droplet when it hits a superhydrophobic surface.
Water repellent superhydrophobic surfaces are covered in microscale roughness, much like a bed of tiny nails. When the balloon (or droplet) hits, it deforms into the gaps between posts. In the case of the water balloon, its rubbery exterior pulls back against that deformation. (For the droplet, the same effect is provided by surface tension.) That tension pulls the deformed parts of the balloon back up, causing the whole balloon to rebound off the nails in a pancake-like shape. For more, check out this video on the student balloon project or the original water droplet research. (Image credits: T. Hecksher et al., Y. Liu et al.; via The New York Times; submitted by Justin B.)


The Sound of a Balloon Popping
The pop of an overfilled balloon is enough to make anyone jump, but you’ve probably never seen it like this. The photo above uses an optical technique known as schlieren photography that reveals changes in density of a transparent gas like air. The shredded rubber of the balloon is still visible in black, and around the balloon there’s an expanding spherical shock wave. It’s the sudden release of energy when the balloon ruptures and the gas inside begins to expand that causes the shock wave. Notice, though, that the gas from the balloon is still clearly visible and balloon-shaped–much like a water balloon that’s just popped. From that clear delineation, I would say that this balloon was filled with a different gas than air–otherwise the density shouldn’t be different enough to make the interior gas distinguishable. (Image credit: G. Settles)

Inside Cavitation
Cavitation bubbles live a short and violent life. It begins when a low-pressure void forms in a fluid–for example, when a liquid is accelerated so that the pressure drops below the vapor pressure, which can happen at the tips of a boat’s propeller or when striking a bottle. The bubbles that form expand and then collapse rapidly as the higher pressure of the liquid surrounding them squeezes them down. That collapse of the bubble is so violent that it heats the fluid inside the bubble to temperatures hotter than the surface of the sun, generating both a flash of light and a shock wave. It’s these shock waves that cause much of the damage associated with cavitation in engineering, but they can be used for good as well. Shock wave lithotripsy uses cavitation-induced shock waves to break down kidney stones. (Image credit: O. Supponen et al., source)

A Particle-Filled Splash
A drop of water that impacts a flat post will form a liquid sheet that eventually breaks apart into droplets when surface tension can no longer hold the water together against the power of momentum flinging the water outward. But what happens if that initial drop of water is filled with particles? Initially, the particle-laden drop’s impact is similar to the water’s – it strikes the post and expands radially in a sheet that is uniformly filled with particles. But then the particles begin to cluster due to capillary attraction, which causes particles at a fluid interface to clump up. You’ve seen the same effect in a bowl of Cheerios, when the floating O’s start to group up in little rafts. The clumping creates holes in the sheet which rapidly expand until the liquid breaks apart into many particle-filled droplets. To see more great high-speed footage and comparisons, check out the full video. (Image credit and submission: A. Sauret et al., source)

Avoiding Coalescence
If you watch closely as you go about your day, you may notice drops of water sometimes bounce off a pool of water instead of coalescing. Fluid dynamicists have been fascinated by this behavior since the 1800s, but it was Couder et al. who explained that these droplets can bounce indefinitely as long as the thin air layer separating the drop and pool is refreshed by vibrating the pool. In this video, Destin teams up with astronaut Don Pettit to film the phenomenon in beautiful high-speed. My favorite part of the video starts around 8:18, where Destin shows Don’s experiments with this effect in microgravity. It turns out that the cello produces just the right frequencies to create a cascade of bouncing water droplets, much like a Tibetan singing bowl turned back on itself! (Video credit: Smarter Every Day; submitted by Destin and effyeahjoebiden)

Underwater Explosions in Slow Mo
The Slow Mo Guys bring their high-speed skills to underwater explosions in this new video. The physics of such explosions is very neat (but also incredibly destructive). When the fuse ignites, a blast wave travels outward in a sphere, creating a bubble filled with gas. Eventually, the pressure of the surrounding water is too great for the bubble to expand against. When its expansion slows, that much larger pressure from the surrounding water starts to crush the bubble back down. Decreasing the volume of the bubble raises its pressure and its temperature again, and this often reignites any leftover fuel and oxidizer left in the bubble. The secondary shock bubble will re-expand, kicking off another round of expansion and collapse. (Video credit: The Slow Mo Guys; submitted by potato-with-a-moustache)

Bubbles and Films Merging
As we’ve seen before, a water droplet can merge gradually with a pool through a coalescence cascade. It turns out that the coalescence of a soap bubble with a soap film can follow a similar process! Initially, the bubble and film are separated by a thin layer of air. Once that air drains away and the bubble contacts the fluid, it starts to coalesce. But the bubble pinches off before its entire volume merges, leaving behind a daughter bubble with about half the radius of the previous bubble. This process repeats until the bubble is small enough that it merges completely. To see more great high-speed footage of this bubble merger, check out the full video below. (Image/video credit: D. Harris et al.)

Fluttering Feathers
Birds do not always vocalize in order to make their songs. The male African broadbill, shown in the top video above, makes a very distinctive brreeeet in its flight displays, but as newly published research shows, the sound comes from its wings, not its voice. During the display, the broadbill spreads its primary feathers and sound is produced on the downstroke, when wingtip speeds reach about 16 m/s. By filming a broadbill wing with a high-speed camera in a wind tunnel at comparable air speeds, researchers could localize the sound production to the 6th and 7th primary feathers.
In the second video above, you can see these feathers twisting and fluttering in the breeze. This is an example of aeroelastic flutter, a phenomenon in which aerodynamic and structural forces couple to induce oscillations. The same phenomenon famously caused the collapse of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge in 1940. In the birds, however, the flutter is non-destructive and the vibration produces audible sound which the other feathers modulate into the calls we hear. Broadbills aren’t the only birds to use this trick; some species of hummingbirds use flutter in their tail feathers during mating displays. (Video, image, and research credits: C. Clark et al.; additional videos here)












