The Kaye effect is a neat phenomenon associated with falling shear-thinning non-Newtonian fluids like shampoo or hand soap. As the falling liquid piles up after hitting a solid surface, it ejects streams of fluid upwards. The effect usually only lasts for a few hundred milliseconds, but it is possible to see it at home without a high-speed camera if you pay close attention. More detailed physics of the effect are discussed in this previously featured video.
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Water Balloon Physics
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This video explores some of the physics behind the much-loved bursting water balloon. The first sections show some “canonical” cases–dropping water balloons onto a flat rigid surface. In some cases the balloon will bounce and in others it breaks. The bursting water balloons develop strong capillary waves (like ripples) across the upper surface and have some shear-induced deformation of the water surface as the rubber peals away. Then the authors placed a water balloon underwater and vibrated it before bursting it with a pin. They note that the breakdown of the interface between the balloon water and surrounding water shows evidence of Rayleigh-Taylor and Richtmyer-Meshkov instabilities. The Rayleigh-Taylor instability is the mushroom-like formation observed when stratified fluids of differing densities mix, while the Richtmyer-Meshkov instability is associated with the impulsive acceleration of fluids of differing density.

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. #

Smoke Transition
Smoke issuing from a round jet undergoes transition from laminar to turbulent flow. As the smoke moves past the unmoving ambient air, the friction between these two layers creates shear and triggers a Kelvin-Helmholtz instability, recognizable by the formation and roll up of vortices along the edges of the jet. Those vortices then roll together in pairs, detach, and devolve into a generally turbulent flow. Because turbulence is far more efficient at mixing than a laminar flow is, the smoke seems to disappear.

Toroidal Vortex
When instabilities exist in laminar flow, they do not always lead immediately to turbulence. In this video, a viscous fluid fills the space between two concentric cylinders. As the inner cylinder rotates, a linear velocity profile (as viewed from above) forms; this is known as Taylor-Couette flow. If any tiny perturbations are added to that linear profile–say there is a nick in the surface of one of the cylinders–the flow will develop an instability. In this type of flow, an exchange of stabilities will occur. Rather than transitioning to turbulence, the fluid develops a stable secondary flow–the toroidal vortex highlighted by the dye in the video. If the rotation rate is increased further other instabilities will develop.
Cornstarch Monsters
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Shaking a fluid surface often results in standing waves known as Faraday waves, but with a non-Newtonian fluid like oobleck, at some frequencies it’s possible to incite other behaviors. Oobleck is shear-thickening, meaning that its viscosity increases when force is applied. This is what allows it to develop finger-like protrusions under high frequency vibrations.

Paint Vibrations
Paint vibrated on a loud speaker explodes in multi-colored jets and droplets. Most paints are shear-thinning non-Newtonian fluids (like ketchup, shampoo, or whipped cream), meaning that their viscosity decreases as they are sheared. This allows them to flow more readily once they are perturbed. #

Venom Properties
Most venomous snakes deliver venom to their prey via grooves in their fangs, rather than through a pressurized bolus through hollow fangs. New research shows that these venoms are shear-thinning non-Newtonian fluids. The surface tension of the venom is such that a drop of venom will tend to flow into and down the groove. Once moving, the shear-thinning properties of the venom decrease the venom’s viscosity, increasing its flow rate down the fang and into the snake’s prey. (via Scientific American; Photo: green mamba, banded snake fang)

Upside-Down Umbrellas
When a heavier fluid is suspended over a lighter fluid (as with ink or food coloring in water), the interface between fluids is subject to the Rayleigh-Taylor instability. As the heavier fluid starts to sink, it forms “fingers”, which develop into mushroom-cap shapes as the fluid continues falling. Sometimes the shear stress between the heavier fluid and lighter fluid causes secondary Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities as well. (Photo by Leonardo Aguiar)
Hawaiian Fissures
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New fissures opened on Mount Kilauea in Hawaii earlier this month, resulting in some fountain-like eruptions of lava. This molten rock is a non-Newtonian fluid with shear-thinning and thixotropic properties. This is what allows the lava to flow long distances before it cools and solidifies. (via jpshoer)