The pistol shrimp (or pistol crab) is a finger-sized crustacean with a fluid dynamical superpower. When it snaps its claw, a jet of water shoots out so quickly (62 mph) that a low-pressure bubble forms in its wake. When the bubble collapses, it emits a bang and a flash of light in a process known as sonoluminescence. The whole event takes less than 300 microseconds. The light emitted suggests that temperatures inside the bubble reach 5,000 degrees Kelvin, around the temperature of the surface of the sun. #
Tag: bubbles

Zero-G Water Bubbles
Astronaut Don Pettit narrates some of his experiments with air and water droplets in microgravity in this video. The lack of body forces and buoyancy in microgravity means that surface tension effects frequently dominate. Pettit’s demonstrations also involve some fun basic physics with bubble behaviors inside of water droplets. See more of Pettit’s Saturday Morning Science videos for additional microgravity fluid mechanics.

Mentos & Diet Coke in Microgravity
For a little Friday fun, consider this microgravity experiment conducted aboard the infamous Vomit Comet: what happens when you combine Diet Coke and Mentos in microgravity? For the record, I think this is the answer. (Via jshoer, who will be flying on the Vomit Comet in 2 weeks – but sadly not with a fluids experiment)

Soap Bubbles in High-Speed
Everyone has played with soap bubbles. They’re an excellent demonstration of surface tension, even more so when filmed at 5,000 frames per second.

Fizziness in Space
Removing gravity has interesting effects on fluids. Here an astronaut aboard the ISS demonstrates what happens when Alka-Seltzer is added to water in microgravity.
