Tag: 2015gofm

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    Extinguishing Flames

    Putting out fires can be a difficult, water-intensive task. In this video, scientists demonstrate how using a non-Newtonian fluid can make it easier to extinguish and suppress flames. Where water tends to splatter and scatter against an object, a yield-stress fluid can cling and coat to smother the flame. The fluid used here is water with a 0.1% polymer additive, which is enough to significantly change the fluid’s rheological properties. Pre-treating flammable objects with the fluid is also effective at suppressing combustion, raising additional possibilities for using such techniques in fighting the spread of wildfires. (Video credit: B. Blackwell et al.)

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    Pollock-Style Physics

    Here on FYFD, we like to show off the artistic side of fluid dynamics. But some researchers are actively studying how artists use fluid dynamics in their art. In this video, they examine one of Jackson Pollock’s painting techniques, in which filaments of paint were applied by flinging paint off a paintbrush. Getting the technique to work requires a fine balance of forces and effects. Firstly, the paint must be viscous enough to hold together in a filament when flung. Secondly, the centripetal acceleration of the rotation must be high to both form the catenary filament and throw it off the brush. And, finally, the Reynolds number needs to be high enough to add some waviness and instability to the filament so that it looks interesting once it hits the canvas. Also be sure to check out the group’s previous work exploring Siqueiros’s painting techniques. (Video credit: B. Palacios et al.)