Search results for: “waves”

  • Moody Waves

    Moody Waves

    Lines of waves emerge from thick morning fog in this series by photographer Raf Maes. The eerie, slightly surreal images were captured in Venice, near Los Angeles. So often ocean photography features huge, turbulent breaking waves. I find it really neat to see these long, unbroken wave crests appearing from the mist. (Image credits: R. Maes; via Colossal)

  • Cloud-Making Waves

    Cloud-Making Waves

    As sea ice disappears in the Arctic Ocean, it leaves behind higher waves on the open water. These large waves help inject sea salt and organic matter into the atmosphere, where they can serve as nucleation sites for ice crystals. A recent field expedition in the Chukchi Sea observed high concentrations of organic particulates in the air and more ice-producing clouds during periods of high wave action. So, oddly enough, the loss of sea ice may lead to more cloud cover and precipitation in the Arctic (though the effect is likely not strong enough to entirely mitigate the effects of ice loss). It’s another example of the intricate and complex connections between ice, ocean, and atmosphere in the Arctic climate. (Image credit: A. Antas-Bergkvist; research credit: J. Inoue et al.; via Gizmodo)

  • Rocking From The Waves

    Rocking From The Waves

    Not all seismic activity stems from earthquakes. In fact, much of Earth’s measured seismic waves come from interactions of the ocean and atmosphere with solid ground. Some of the strongest vibrations come from interactions of ocean waves, which transmit pressure waves that don’t attenuate with depth before passing into the solid Earth.

    How those waves propagate and scatter inside the Earth has been a matter of contention for decades, but recent simulations are beginning to uncover the mechanisms that lead to the waves seismologists measure. (Image credit: I. Mingazova; via Physics Today)

  • Hedgehogs Atop Waves

    Hedgehogs Atop Waves

    Since Michael Faraday, scientists have watched the curious patterns that form in a vibrating liquid. By adding floating particles to such a system, researchers have discovered spiky, hedgehog-like shapes that form near the surface. At low amplitudes, the surface patterns resemble the typical smooth rounded lobes one would expect, but as the wave amplitude increases, spikes form in the tracers, driven by the motion of the waves. (Image and research credit: H. Alarcón et al.; via APS Physics)

  • Freezing Waves

    Freezing Waves

    Vibrate a liquid, and you’ll get a pattern of standing waves known as Faraday waves. In this project, artist Linden Gledhill adds a twist to the usual view of these waves by capturing them in plastic. As the polymer liquid vibrates, Gledhill uses a flash of UV light to cure the polymer, freezing the wave pattern. Check out the original video for an even better look. (Image, video, and submission credit: L. Gledhill, 1, 2, 3, 4)

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    Simulating Better Breaking Waves

    In the ocean, breaking waves trap air into bubbles that then cluster into foam, but conventional simulations don’t capture this foaminess. For bubbles to cluster into foam, there has to be a force preventing — or at least delaying — their coalescence. Typically, this is caused by impurities in the water that help lower the surface tension and thereby lengthen the bubbles’ lifespans. When these features get added to simulation models, bubbles begin to cluster and breaking waves become foamy. (Image and video credit: P. Karnakov et al.)

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    “Waves”

    The “Waves” installation by artist Daniel Palacios appears deceptively simple, just a rope mounted between two motors. But once the motors start spinning, it is anything but. The installation shifts in response to those around it, creating varying numbers of steady, standing waves or even wildly chaotic ones that whistle through the air. It’s a neat visualization of one of the most commonly-measured quantities in physics: the changes in a wave with time. (Video and image credit: D. Palacios; via Flow Vis)

  • Internal Waves in the Andaman Sea

    Internal Waves in the Andaman Sea

    Differences in temperature and salinity create distinct layers within the ocean. When combined with flow over submerged topography — underwater canyons, mountains, and reefs — it makes waves. But those waves aren’t always apparent when sitting at the surface. Instead, they travel along those ocean layers as internal waves that can be as tall as hundreds of meters in height.

    When the sun glints just right off the ocean, these massive internal waves can be caught by satellite imagery, as shown in the above image of the Andaman Sea near Thailand and Myanmar. Even seemingly calm waters can roil in the deep. (Image credit: USGS; via NASA Earth Observatory)

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    Making Waves

    The Seoul Aquarium is now home to an enormous crashing wave, courtesy of design company d’strict. Check out several different views of the anamorphic illusion in their video above. There’s no word on the techniques used to generate the animation, but it’s certainly a cool visual! (Image and video credit: d’strict; via Colossal)