Tag: blowing

  • Reshaping the Wake to Decrease Drag

    Reshaping the Wake to Decrease Drag

    When it comes to the aerodynamics of cars, there’s only so much streamlining one can do. In the end, most cars have a certain boxy-ness as a matter of practicality; they do, after all, have to carry people and things. But that doesn’t mean we’re stuck with the level of drag those shapes entail.

    For cars and other non-streamlined objects, much of their drag comes from their wake, which usually contains a large, asymmetric, and unsteady recirculation region. In a new wind tunnel study, scientists used air blasts to reshape this wake, making it more symmetrical, even when the wind direction did not align with the car model. That reduced the drag by 6%. They’re now experimenting with adding additional nozzles along the non-windward edges of the model to see if they can reduce drag even further.

    Although this appears to be the first time this technique has been tested for road vehicles, the idea of blowing air to improve aerodynamics is well-established, particularly in aviation. (Image credit: V. Malagoli; research credit: R. Li et al., submitted by Marc A.)

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    Liquid Acrobatics

    Imagine blowing through a straw into a nearly empty glass–we probably all did this as children and sent water, milk, and soda flying everywhere! In essence, this video shows that same act, but filmed by a high-speed camera. The “straw” blows a steady stream of helium into a shallow pool of silicone oil and slowly moves so that the angle the straw makes with the pool changes. As the angle changes, different regimes are visible. First waves appear on the surface of the pool, then a bulge forms, which develops into a droplet stream, then on into the chaos of bubbles and jets. It’s good I couldn’t see this in slow motion as a child or I would have never used my straw for drinking!