Striking a match and blowing it out seems rather simple to the naked eye. But with high-speed video and schlieren photography, the act takes on new complexity. Schlieren photography is an optical technique that is incredibly sensitive to changes in density, which makes it a prime choice for visualizing flows with temperatures variations or shock waves. Here it shows the hot gases generated as the match is lit. Once the match ignites, the flow calms somewhat into a gently rising plume of exhaust and hot air. When someone enters the frame to blow out the match, the frame rate increases to capture what happens next. The flow field around the match becomes very complex as the air and flame interact. The range of length scales in the flow increases, from scales of several centimeters down to those less than a millimeter. This complexity and range of sizes is a hallmark of turbulence. (Video credit: V. Miller et al.)
Tag: APS DFD 2014
FYFD at APS DFD 2014
I’m excited to announce that I will be attending the American Physical Society Division of Fluid Dynamics meeting in San Francisco next month. This year I will be co-teaching a workshop on communicating science to general audiences. Here’s the lowdown:
Scientist-Reporter Workshop: How to tell your science story
Want to share your research with the public? Five experts lead a workshop on ways to draw attention to your research. Join science journalist Flora Lichtman, whose work has appeared on NPR, and in The New York Times and Popular Science; Jason Bardi, writer and Director of Media Services at AIP; Nicole Sharp, creator of “F! Yeah Fluid Dynamics”; Rachel Levy, creator of “Grandma got STEM” and biomechanic David Hu for a workshop on disseminating your research to news outlets.
To learn more or register to attend, check out: http://apsdfd2014.stanford.edu/?q=content/special-events
We’ll have a follow-on to the workshop at Sunday night’s banquet. For those who can’t make it to the conference in person, never fear: we will be taking to the Internet, too. More on that at a later date.
So who all is coming?

Levitating Droplets with Motion
There are many ways to levitate a droplet – heating, vibration, and acoustic levitation all come to mind – but this video demonstrates a simpler method: a moving wall. Depositing a drop on a moving wall keeps it aloft with a thin, constantly replenished layer of air. The thickness of this lubricating air film is directly measurable from interference fringes created by light reflecting off the surface of the drop. Incredibly, the air layer is only a few microns thick, but the resulting pressure in the air film is high enough to levitate millimeter-sized droplets! (Video credit: M. Saito et al.; via @AlvaroGuM)

Shooting Droplets with Lasers
Last week we saw what happens when a solid projectile hits a water droplet; today’s video shows the impact of a laser pulse on a droplet. Several things happen here, but at very different speeds. When the laser impacts, it vaporizes part of the droplet within nanoseconds. A shock wave spreads from the point of impact and a cloud of mist sprays out. This also generates pressure on the impact face of the droplet, but it takes milliseconds–millions of nanoseconds–for the droplet to start moving and deforming. The subsequent explosion of the drop depends both on the laser energy and focus, which determine the size of the impulse imparted to the droplet. The motivation for the work is extreme ultraviolet lithography–a technique used for manufacturing next-generation semiconductor integrated circuits–which uses lasers to vaporize microscopic droplets during the manufacturing process. (Video credit: A. Klein et al.)

Shooting Droplets
This animation shows high-speed video of a polystyrene particle striking a falling water droplet. Under the right conditions, the particle rips through the droplet, stretching the water into a bell-shaped lamella extending from a thicker rim. When the particle detaches, surface tension rapidly collapses the lamella into a ring which destabilizes. Thin ligaments and droplets fly off the crown-like ring as momentum overcomes surface tension’s ability to hold the droplet together. Be sure to check out the full video on YouTube or later next month at the APS Division of Fluid Dynamics meeting. (Yes, I will be there!) (Image credit: V. Sechenyh et al., source video)

