Over at Smarter Every Day, Destin has a new video, this time about how fish eat, which involves some pretty awesome physics. Instead of accelerating their entire body to close the distance to prey, fish thrust their jaws forward. As they do, they open their mouth, expanding the volume there and lowering the pressure. This causes water to flow into their mouth, pulling the prey with it. But the water has momentum, which would push the fish backward. To prevent this, the fish then opens its gills, allowing the water to rush back out while trapping the prey in its mouth. Be sure to check out Destin’s video so that you can see the process in high-speed. (Video credit: Smarter Every Day)
Tag: fish

Fluids Round-up – 7 December 2013
Fluids round-up time! I missed out last weekend because of the holidays, so this is a long list of links. There’s a lot of really great stuff here, including some neat fluidsy geophysics and astronomy.
- xkcd’s Randall Munroe explains why you can’t boil your tea by stirring it.
- LATimes describes a flying jellyfish robot.
- Wired takes a detailed look at archerfish physics, including some of the fluid dynamics we’ve discussed previously. (via iamaponyrocket)
- Several readers have also pointed out this ASCII CFD simulator, seen in action in this video.
- New models suggest that Europa’s chaotic terrain features may be due to turbulence in its lower latitudes.
- In a similar vein, nearby Jupiter’s Great Red Spot may owe its longevity to existing in three-dimensions.
- NASA revealed new movies and images of Saturn’s polar hexagon this week. For more, see some of the earlier photos and laboratory recreations of the hexagon and this summary from io9. (submitted by @AndrisPiebalgs)
- Continuing with the astronomical bent, check out Anders Sandberg’s musings on what a habitable planet twice the size of Earth would be like.
- Back here on Earth, NASA released some impressive images of global weather patterns as computed by their high-resolution models.
- PhysicsBuzz takes a look at the fluid dynamics of flying fish.
- I’ve seen plenty of videos of people doing crazy things with non-Newtonian fluids, but Hard Science adds an interesting new one: attempting to ride a bike across a pool of oobleck.
- PopSci reported from CES 2013 about a non-Newtonian fluid for protecting tech gadgets from impacts.
- Drummer Ali Siadat shows how to blow the perfect smoke rings using a bass drum. (via Jennifer Ouellette)
- Finally, this week’s lead image comes from the Grand Canyon where a strong temperature inversion created spectacular fog-filled vistas.
(Photo credit: E. Whittaker)

Mackerel vs. Eel: Who Swam It Better?
Which matters more, form or function? This simulation sets out to answer that question by comparing the swimming motion of eels and mackerels. Eels have longer, more rounded body shapes and swim in an undulatory fashion with their whole body, whereas mackerels have shorter bodies with a more elliptical cross-section and primarily move their tails when swimming. The simulation separates body type from swimming motion by creating virtual races between fishes of the same body type using the two forms of swimming. Eels swim at moderate Reynolds numbers where viscous and inertial effects are reasonably balanced. Under those conditions, eel-like swimming was faster, even with a mackerel’s body type. At the higher Reynolds numbers where mackerels usually swim, inertial forces domination and the racing fish moved faster if they swam like a mackerel, even with the body of an eel. The results suggest that the swimming motion matters more in each Reynolds number range than the shape of the swimmer. This is a neat way that simulation can answer questions we cannot test with an experiment! (Video credit: I. Borazjani and F. Sotiropoulos)

Visualizing Fish Wakes
This novel flow visualization technique uses dilute solutions of the tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). These rod-shaped particles align with shear and produce a birefringent interference pattern visible when viewed between crossed polarizing filters. The intensity of the light is related to the magnitude of shear. The technique is benign to the fish but enables researchers to see fluid motion around fish that other techniques cannot capture. #

