Search results for: “high-speed video”

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    Watching a Sneeze

    What does a sneeze look like? You might imagine it as a violent burst of air and a cloud of tiny droplets. But this high-speed video shows, that’s only part of the story. The liquid leaving a sneezer’s mouth and nose is a mixture of saliva and mucus, and in the few hundred milliseconds it takes to expel this air/mucosaliva mixture, there’s not enough time for the liquid to break into droplets. Instead, liquid leaves the mouth as a fluid sheet that breaks into long ligaments.

    Because mucosaliva is viscoelastic and non-Newtonian, it does not break down into droplets as quickly as water. Instead, when stretched, the proteins inside the fluid tend to pull back, causing large droplets to form with skinny strands between them – the beads-on-a-string instability. The end result when the ligaments do finally break is more large droplets than one would expect from a fluid like water. Understanding this break-up process and the final distribution of droplet sizes is vital for better understanding the spread of diseases and pathogens.  (Video credit: Bourouiba Research Group; research paper: B. Scharfman et al., PDF)

  • Paint Flying

    Paint Flying

    Paint getting flung from a spinning drill bit can create some incredible art. Here the Slow Mo Guys recreate the effect in high-speed video. What we’re seeing is tug of war between centrifugal force, which tries to fling the paint outward, and internal forces in the paint, which struggle to hold the the fluid together. Primarily, it’s surface tension keeping the fluid together, but, depending on what sort of non-Newtonian fluid the paint may be, there could be other internal forces helping keep the paint intact. In this case, centrifugal force is clearly winning out, though the paint stretches pretty far before it thins enough to break. It would be interesting to see how the balance plays out with the drill bit spinning at a lower RPM. (Image credit: Slow Mo Guys, source)

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    Inside a Popping Bubble

    Popping a soap bubble is more complicated than what the eye can see. In high-speed video, we find that the action is very directional, with the soap bubble film pulling away from the point of rupture. As it does so, waves, like those in a flapping flag, appear along the surface and strings of fluid form along the edge of the film before breaking into droplets. This video takes matters a step further, looking at what happens to air inside a bubble when it pops. Those subtle waves and strings of fluid we see in the high-speed rupture have a distinctive effect on air inside the bubble. As the film pulls away, it leaves behind a rippled, wavy surface rather than a smooth sphere of foggy air. (Video credit: Z. Pan et al.)

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    Bullet-Time Inferno

    Remember the bullet time effect from The Matrix? This spectacular video gives you a similar effect with the turbulent flames created by firebreathers. To capture this level of detail, Mitch Martinez uses an array of 50 cameras placed around the performers, allowing him to reconstruct the full, three-dimensional representation of the flames. Similarly, some scientists use arrays of high-speed video cameras to collect 3D, time-resolved data about phenomena like combustion. Because these flows are so complex in terms of their fluid dynamics and chemistry, capturing full 3D data is important to help understand and model the flow better. (Video credit: M. Martinez; via Rakesh R.)

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    Turbulent Ink

    Turbulence is found throughout our lives, but rarely is it as startlingly beautiful as in this Slow Mo Guys video. Here they show high-speed videos of ink being injected into water. The resulting plumes are turbulent from the very start, with innumerable folds and eddies billowing outward as the plume expands. The large difference in length scales–from the millimeter-sized curls to the meter-sized length of the plume–is one of the classic characteristics of turbulence and part of what makes turbulent flows so difficult to model computationally. Energy in these flows is generated at the large scales, but it’s dissipated at the very smallest scales through viscosity. This means that to properly model a turbulent flow, you have to capture the largest scales, the smallest scales, and everything in between in order to represent this energy cascade from large to small. It’s a problem that engineers, mathematicians, meteorologists, and physicists have struggled with for more than a century. But, here, at least, we can all just sit back and enjoy the beauty. (Video credit: The Slow Mo Guys)

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    Hummingbird Hovering

    Hummingbirds have a unique way of flying among birds. By flapping in a figure-8 motion, they generate lift on both the upstroke and the downstroke, which enables them to fly forward, backward, and even hover for extended periods. Such mid-air acrobatics are necessary for a species that feeds on flower nectar. What is especially impressive about the birds, though, is how they hold up even in adverse conditions like wind or rain. By placing birds in a wind tunnel and filming with high-speed video, researchers can see how hummingbirds maintain their feeding position even in 20 mph (32 kph) winds. By fanning out their tail feathers like a rudder, they can control their body orientation despite turbulent gusts. Not even rain stops them. The birds will periodically shake themselves dry, much like a dog if a dog could manage to fly while shaking itself. (Video credit: Deep Look; submitted by entropy-perturbation)

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    Popcorn Popping

    The familiar popping behavior of popcorn is the combination of several events. When heated, unpopped kernels act like pressure vessels, managing to contain their boiling water content until a critical temperature of 180 degrees Celsius. At this temperature, nearly all kernels fracture. Popcorn’s jump doesn’t come from the fracture, though. Most of its acrobatics occur when a leg of starch branches out of the popping kernel. The starch acts somewhat like a muscle – after being compressed against the ground, it springs back, propelling the corn upward. Finally, by synchronizing high-speed video and audio recordings of popping corn, researchers determined that the pop in popcorn is not caused by fracture or rebound but instead is the result of the release of water vapor. (Image credit: TAMU NAL, source; research credit: E. Virot and A. Ponomarenko; submitted by Chad W.)

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    Making a Bottle Resonate

    If you’ve ever blown across the top of a bottle to make it play a note, then you’ve created a Helmholtz resonator. Air flow across the top of the bottle causes air in and around the bottle neck to vibrate up and down. Like a mass on a spring, the air oscillates with a particular frequency that depends on the system’s characteristics. We hear this vibration as a a deep hum, but in the high-speed video above, you’re actually seeing the vibration as smoke pulsing in and out of the bottle. Helmholtz resonance shows up more than just in blowing across beer bottles; it’s also a factor in many resonating instruments, like the guitar. To learn more about the physics and mathematics of the effect, check out this page from the University of New South Wales. (Video credit: N. Moore)

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    Fire-Breathing

    In this high-speed video, the Slow Mo Guys demonstrate fire-breathing. Rather than using a liquid fuel like kerosene, they utilize cornstarch, which is both easily flammable and non-volatile thanks to its powdered form. Blowing out the cornstarch creates a turbulent jet of cornstarch and air. Combine that with a combustion source, and the cornstarch quickly deflagrates, meaning that the flame propagates via heat transfer. When neighboring regions of cornstarch become hot enough, they ignite and the flame front expands. You can observe this in the flame growth shown in the video; just after ignition the cornstarch jet is much wider than the fire and it takes some time for the flames to catch up with the jet. Although a liquid-fueled fireball operates by the same principles, it can look rather different. For comparison, check out this high-speed video of a WD-40 fireball. And, hopefully it goes without saying, but don’t try this stuff at home. (Video credit: The Slow Mo Guys)

  • Hand Dryers and Atomization

    Hand Dryers and Atomization

    Some newer electric hand dryers, like the Dyson Airblade, use jets of high-speed air to dry hands faster than traditional models. Much of their effectiveness comes from the rapid atomization–or break-up into tiny droplets–of water on one’s hands. This is demonstrated in the animation above, which comes from a high-speed video of a water drop falling through the jets of a homemade dryer. Breaking up the water quickly disperses the microdroplets but it also speeds up evaporation by greatly increasing the exposed surface area of the water. This is similar to how you can get instant snow from throwing boiling water if it’s cold enough outside. (Image credit: tesla500, source video; submitted by Nick)