Tag: density

  • “Oil Spill”

    “Oil Spill”

    In “Oil Spill” artist Fabian Oefner explores the shapes and colors of oil floating atop water. An old adage tells us that oil and water don’t mix, but this is not perfectly true. Especially in low concentrations, oil can mix slightly with water, which is why the edges of Oefner’s creations become fuzzy and break down. For the most part, though, the thin layer of oil spreads across the water’s surface, its slight variations in thickness casting the different iridescent colors we observe – just the same as a soap bubble’s iridescence. The colorful patterns are a snapshot of motion in the oil; in some places it radiates outward, pulled by the stronger surface tension of water. In other places it forms plumes and swirls that may be the result of temperature variations or other disquiet motion in the surrounding water or air.  (Image credits: F. Oefner)

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    Living Fluid Dynamics

    This short film for the 2016 Gallery of Fluid Motion features Montana State University students experiencing fluid dynamics in the classroom and in their daily lives. As in her previous film (which we deconstructed), Shanon Reckinger aims to illustrate some of our everyday interactions with fluids. This time identifying individual phenomena is left as an exercise for the viewer, but there are hints hidden in the classroom scenes. How many can you catch? I’ve labeled some of the ones I noticed in the tags. (Video credit: S. Reckinger et al.)

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    Seeing Blast Waves

    With a large enough explosion, it’s actually possible to see shock waves. This high-speed camera footage shows the detonation of a car packed with explosives. After the initial flash, you can see the thin membrane of the blast wave expanding outward. This shock wave is a traveling discontinuity in the air’s properties–temperature, pressure, and density all change suddenly over an incredibly small distance. It’s this last variable–density–that enables us to see the effect. Density has a significant impact on air’s index of refraction (which also explains heat mirages). In this case, the shift in refractive index is large enough that we see the difference relative to the background, enabling our eyes to follow an otherwise invisible effect.  (Video credit: Mythbusters/Discovery Channel; via Gizmodo)

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    Dead Water

    Sailors have long known about the “dead water” phenomenon, which can bring ships to a near-standstill, but it was only within the last century that an explanation for the behavior was found. The underlying cause is a stratification of fluids of different densities. As seen in the video above, when a boat moves by exerting a constant force, such as with propellers, it generates an internal wave along the interface between two density layers in the water. As the wave grows in amplitude, it speeds up, chasing and eventually breaking against the boat. The energy that drives the internal wave’s growth comes from the energy the boat expends for propulsion; the larger and closer the wave gets, the slower the boat goes because its energy is sapped by the wave. In the ocean, particularly near sources of freshwater run-off, like melting glaciers, the water can be extremely stratified, with many layers of different salinity and density. The end of the video simulates this with a three-fluid demonstration in which the boat’s motion generates internal waves across multiple density interfaces. (Video credit: M. Mercier et al.)

  • Blast Waves Visualized

    Blast Waves Visualized

    Typically, shock waves are invisible to the human eye. Using sensitive optical techniques like schlieren photography, researchers in a lab can visualize sharp density gradients like shock waves or even the slight density variations caused by natural convection. But it takes some special conditions to make shock waves visible to the naked eye. The blast wave of the explosion in the photo above is a great example. The leading edge of the shock wave and the heat of the explosion create a strong, sharp change in density. That density change is accompanied by a change in the air’s refractive index. As light travels from the distance toward the camera, it’s distorted–more specifically, refracted–when it travels through the blast wave and its wake. And, in this case, that visual distortion is strong enough that we can clearly see the outlines of the shock waves moving out from the explosion. The apparent horizontal line through the blast wave is probably the intersection of a weaker secondary shock wave with the initial expanding shock wave. (Image credit: Defense Research and Development Canada; via io9)

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    Internal Wave Demo

    This video has a fun and simple demonstration of the importance of fluid density in buoyancy and stratification. Fresh water (red) and salt water (blue) are released together into a small tank. Being lighter and less dense, the red water settles on top of the blue water, though some internal waves muddy their interface. After the water settles, a gate is placed between them once more and one side is thoroughly mixed to create a third fluid density (purple), which, when released, settles between the red and blue layers. In addition to displaying buoyancy, this demo does a great job ofaa showing the internal waves that can occur within a fluid, especially one of varying density like the ocean. (Video credit: UVic Climate Modeling Group)

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    Dropping Through Strata

    When a droplet falls through an air/water interface, a vortex ring can form and fall through the liquid. In this video, the researchers investigate the effects of a stratified fluid interface on this falling vortex ring. In this case, a less dense fluid sits atop a denser one. Depending on the density of the initial falling droplet and the distance it travels through the first fluid, the behavior and break-up of the vortex ring when it hits the denser fluid differs. Here four different behaviors are demonstrated, including bouncing and trapping of the vortex ring. (Video credit: R. Camassa et al.)

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    Pancake Vortex

    In large-scale geophysical flows, rotation and density gradients often play major roles in the structures that form. Here the UCLA SPINLab demonstrates how large, essentially flat vortices–pancake vortices–form in rotating, stratified fluids. The stratification, in this case, is due to the density difference between salt water and fresh water; salt water is denser and therefore less buoyant, so it sinks toward the bottom of the tank. Note how the pancake vortex only forms when the fluid is both stratified and rotating.  If it lacks one of the two, the structures will be very different. (Video credit: O. Aubert et al./SPINLab UCLA)

  • Water Balloon Physics

    [original media no longer available]

    This video explores some of the physics behind the much-loved bursting water balloon. The first sections show some “canonical” cases–dropping water balloons onto a flat rigid surface.  In some cases the balloon will bounce and in others it breaks. The bursting water balloons develop strong capillary waves (like ripples) across the upper surface and have some shear-induced deformation of the water surface as the rubber peals away. Then the authors placed a water balloon underwater and vibrated it before bursting it with a pin. They note that the breakdown of the interface between the balloon water and surrounding water shows evidence of Rayleigh-Taylor and Richtmyer-Meshkov instabilities. The Rayleigh-Taylor instability is the mushroom-like formation observed when stratified fluids of differing densities mix, while the Richtmyer-Meshkov instability is associated with the impulsive acceleration of fluids of differing density.

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    Tank Shock Waves

    High-speed video of a tank firing at 18000 fps shows shock waves made visible due to light distortion. When the air density changes (due to temperature or compression), it’s index of refraction changes, causing the background to appear distorted. Most of the video shows the subsonic development of the turbulent exhaust plume. Note the speed at which the exhaust moves relative to the airborne shrapnel. (submitted by Stephan)