Handmade kinetic sculptures by artists Marion Pinaffo and Raphaël Pluvinage spin and paint the sky in colorful smoke in “Sfumato”. Named for an artistic technique in which shading gradually changes tone and hue, the installation was built, the artists note, “without motors, electronics, computer generated images, or artificial intelligence”. Just pure hands-on engineering and physics. Watch the short video of the installation in action for the full effect. You can find more of their work on their website, Vimeo, and Instagram. (Image and video credit: M. Pinaffo and R. Pluvinage; via Colossal)
Tag: flow visualization

Tornadoes in a Bucket
In nature, some powerful tornadoes form additional tornadoes within their shear layer. These subvortices revolve around the main tornado, causing massive destruction in their wake. In the laboratory, researchers create a similar multi-tornado system with a spinning disk at the bottom of a shallow, cylindrical layer of water. Depending on how fast the disk spins, different numbers of subvortices form around the main vortex.
In this poster, researchers show the transition from a 3-subvortex system to a 2-subvortex one. Starting at the 12 o’clock position and moving clockwise, we see 3 subvortices arranged in a triangle. A sudden change in the disk’s rotation speed destabilizes the system, causing the subvortices to break down and shift into a new 2-subvortex configuration. As this happens, material that was isolated in each subvortex (darker blue regions) is suddenly able to mix. That suggests that a real-world multiple vortex tornado might suddenly shed debris if it lost enough angular momentum. Back in the lab, though, the shift to a stable 2-subvortex system once again isolates material in individual subvortices and prevents it from mixing with the rest of the flow. (Image and research credit: G. Di Labbio et al. 1, 2)

Farewell, Saffire!
After eight years and six flight tests, NASA said a fiery farewell to the Spacecraft Fire Safety Experiment, or Saffire, mission. Each Saffire test took place on an uncrewed Cygnus supply vehicle after undocking from the space station. Cygnus craft burn up during atmospheric re-entry, so using them as a platform guaranteed safety for the station’s crew.
A Plexiglass sample burns as part of Saffire-V’s experiments. In this experiment, researchers found that flames grew and spread faster on thin ribs of Plexiglass (left) than on thicker samples (right). Saffire itself used a small wind tunnel to push air past its burning materials. The tests included materials like plexiglass, cotton, Nomex, and other fabrics that might be found on a spacecraft or its occupants. The goal, of course, is to understand how fires grow and spread in a spacecraft in order to protect the crew. To that end, Saffire experiments recorded not only what went on inside their test unit, but also what the conditions were in the spacecraft as Saffire burned. (Image and video credit: NASA; via Gizmodo and NASA Glenn)

Vortex Below
When a drop of ethanol lands on a pool of water, surface tension forces draw it into a fast-spreading film. Evenly-spaced plumes form at the edges of the film, then the film stops spreading and instead retracts. All of this takes place in about 0.6 seconds. But, as the image above shows, there’s more that goes on beneath the surface. A vortex ring forms and spreads under the film, driven by the shear layer under the edge of the plumes. Here, the vortex ring is visible in the swirling particles near the water surface. (Image and research credit: A. Pant and B. Puthenveettil)

Langebaan Lagoon
Strands of green and brown mix in Langebaan Lagoon on the South African coast in this astronaut photograph. The shallow tidal estuary has a sandy floor and, since no river flows into it, the deeper green sections seen here are channels carved solely by the back-and-forth flow of the tides. To the north of the lagoon, Saldanha Bay is a busy hub for fishing and industry. The long reddish line extending into the water is a railroad pier responsible for loading 96 percent of South Africa’s iron ore gets loaded onto ships. (Image credit: NASA; via NASA Earth Observatory)

Spreading the Word
Just as prairie dogs bark to warn the colony of danger, many plants can signal their neighbors when they’re under attack. This thale cress releases calcium when caterpillars eat it; neighboring plants pick up the chemical signal and pass it along. To better understand how the signal gets passed, researchers genetically modified this plant to fluoresce when extra calcium is on the move. It’s incredible to watch the flow from one side of a leaf to another. (Image and research credit: Y. Aratani et al.; via Colossal)

Convection in Action
We’re surrounded daily by convection — a buoyancy-driven flow — but most of the time it’s invisible to us. In this video, Steve Mould shows off what convection really looks like with some of his excellent tabletop demos. The first half of the video gives profile views of turbulent convection, with chaotic and unsteady patterns. When he switches to oil instead of water, the higher viscosity (and lower Reynolds number) offer a more structured, laminar look. And finally, he shows a little non-temperature-dependent convection with a mixture of Tia Maria and cream, which convects due to evaporation changing the density. (Image and video credit: S. Mould; submitted by Eric W.)

Serpents and Ouroboros
Beads of condensation on a cooling, oil-slicked surface have a dance all their own in this video. Large droplets gobble up their fellows as they follow serpentine paths; each new droplet donates its interfacial energy to feed the larger drop’s kinetic energy. Eventually, the big drops switch to a circular path, like an ouroboros, the tail-eating serpent of mythology. This transition happens due to the oil shifted by the dancing droplets. You can recreate the effect at home by rubbing a thin layer of oil over glass and setting it atop a hot mug of your favorite beverage. (Video and image credit: M. Lin et al.; research credit: M. Lin et al.)

Swirls Off South Australia
Summer winds along Australia’s Bonney Coast push coastal waters offshore, triggering the upwelling of colder waters from depths below 300 meters. These cold waters from the deep are nutrient-rich, thanks to all the decomposition that happens along the ocean floor. The infusion of nutrients triggers an explosion of life, visible here in the form of a green phytoplankton bloom along the shelf break. In turn, the phytoplankton attract fish and blue whales. Even great white sharks are drawn to the cornucopia. (Image credit: W. Liang; via NASA Earth Observatory)

Skittering Drops
Drip some ethanol on a hot surface, and you’d expect it to spread into a thin layer and evaporate. But that doesn’t always happen, and a recent study looks at why.
Ethanol is what’s known as a volatile liquid, meaning that it evaporates easily at room temperatures, well below its boiling point. When dropped on a uniformly heated surface above 45 degrees Celsius, the drop contracted into a hemisphere and then began to wander randomly across the surface. Researchers trained an infrared camera on the drop from below (above image), and found an unsteady, roiling motion inside the drop. These asymmetric flows, they concluded, drive the drop’s erratic self-propulsion. They suspect the mechanism may explain why some ink droplets wind up in the wrong place on a page during ink-jet printing. (Image and research credit: P. Kant et al.; via APS Physics)
















