This false-color satellite image — the recent winner of NASA Earth Observatory’s Tournament Earth 2020 — shows sands and seaweed off the coast of the Bahamas. Ocean currents and tides eroded these elaborate fluted designs in much the same way that winds sculpt desert dunes. The overlap in form is no accident; as seen in recent work, researchers are finding that both air and water move granular materials like sand according to the same rules. (Image credit: S. Andrefouet; via NASA Earth Observatory)
Tag: fluid dynamics

Growing Metal Fingers
Eutectic gallium-indium alloy is a room-temperature liquid metal with an extremely high surface tension. Normally, that high surface tension would keep it from spreading easily. But once the metal oxidizes, the surface tension drops. When that oxidation is combined with an electric field, the metal spreads into fingers. The higher the voltage, the more complex the fingering patterns. (Image and video credit: K. Hillaire et al.)

Bioluminescence at the Beach
A bioluminescent phytoplankton bloom is causing a stir among California beachgoers. During the daytime, aggregations of Lingulodinium polyedra appear reddish-brown in color (think the classic ‘red tide’). But at night the phytoplankton bioluminesce, specifically when they’re disturbed by a change in shear force. This is why the brightest glows are visible in crashing waves or around the boards of surfers.
Beautiful as it appears, blooms like these are deadly to marine life. The excess numbers of phytoplankton strip water of oxygen, causing mass die-offs among fish. Even residents several miles inland of the beaches are reporting the unpleasant smell that results. (Image credits: AP; video credit: Scripps Institute of Oceanography; via Gizmodo)

Capsule Impact and Bursting
Nature and industry are full of elastic membranes filled with a fluid, from red blood cells to water balloons. A new study looks at how these capsules deform — and sometimes burst — on impact. The researchers created custom elastic shells that they filled with various fluids like water, glycerol, and honey, then used the impacts to build a model of capsule deformation.
They found that there’s significant overlap between droplet impacts and capsule impacts, with a few key differences; instead of surface tension, capsules resist deformation through their elastic shell’s surface modulus — a combination of its elasticity and thickness. Capsules, unlike droplets, can also burst. To study this, the researchers used water balloons, which they were able to pre-stretch more easily than their custom shells. They found that their model could accurately predict the conditions under which the balloons burst.
The authors hope the model will be helpful both in designing capsules intended to burst — like a fire-fighting projectile — and in creating safety measures to prevent capsule burst — like car-crash standards that protect from organ damage. (Image and research credit: E. Jambon-Puillet et al.; via Physics World; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)

How COVID-19 Affects the Lungs
One of the best known COVID-19 symptoms of this pandemic is difficulty breathing, and while you’ve likely heard a lot about ventilators used to help patients get oxygen, you may not know much about the processes that cause the breathing problems. This video from Deep Look provides a solid overview of the infection route and how lung damage occurs during infection. Perhaps unsurprisingly — this is FYFD, after all — fluid dynamics plays a major role in this process, both under normal conditions and when air sacs in the lungs get damaged by the body’s immune system responding to the virus. (Image and video credit: Deep Look)

A Year From Geostationary Orbit
Our planet is a complex fluid dynamical system, and one of the best ways to watch nature at work is through timelapse. This short film takes us through an entire year, from December 2015 to December 2016, as viewed from a geostationary weather satellite centered over Oceania.
The imagery is rather hypnotic, with clouds swirling day and night across the full field of view. Watch closely, though, and you’ll see a lot of neat phenomena from typhoons forming in the Pacific to wave clouds streaming from the islands of Japan. You can also see clouds blossoming (especially during the day) over the humid rainforests of Oceania.
There are neat non-fluids phenomena, too, like a total solar eclipse and the permanent sunlight of Arctic and Antarctic summers. What do you notice? (Image and video credit: F. Dierich)

Unifying Sediment Transport Theory
On windy days, streaks of snowflakes snake in the air above a mountaintop snowfield. And when snorkeling in the surf, you can watch the inbound waves sculpt underwater ripples in the sand. Both are examples of sediment transport, and scientists have struggled to understand why the physics of these grains seems to differ between air and water. We observe certain behaviors, like saltation, in air and very different behaviors for grains underwater.
One of the key differences is how much erosion occurs for a given amount of shear. In air, the relationship is linear; double the shear stress and you double the sediment transport rate. But in water, the relationship is nonlinear, meaning a small change in the shear stress can have a much larger effect on the rate of transport.
A new study suggests that these differences are really only skin deep. Through detailed simulations, the researchers showed that what really matters is the energy dissipation caused by collisions between grains. Whether the medium is air or water, there are two important regions in the flow: the bed region where particles experience little movement, and the overlying region where grains are energized and lifted by the flow. In this framework, the researchers found no difference in how energy is dissipated, regardless of the medium.
So why do measured sediment transport rates vary between air and water? The authors concluded that the relationship between shear and transport rate is, indeed, nonlinear. It’s just that the wind here on Earth is too weak to reach that nonlinearity. (Image credit: snow – wisconsinpictures, sand – J. Chavez; research credit: T. Pähtz and O. Durán; via APS Physics; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)

Holding Pipes in Place
Newton’s 3rd law states that any action has an equal and opposite reaction. Often engineers use this to our advantage; the thrust from expelling propellants is what lifts our rockets to space. But sometimes those reactions are undesirable, as illustrated in this Practical Engineering video with underground pipes.
Anytime flow through the pipe is forced to change direction, the flow causes an equal and opposite force on the joint. Just as with rockets, engineers refer to this reaction force as thrust. And if the thrust goes unaccounted for, it will force pipe joints apart. Civil engineers use several methods to fix pipelines against these forces, including concrete blocks that distribute the force to the surrounding soil and flange fittings that resist pipe movement. (Video and image credit: Practical Engineering)

Singing in the MRI
We rarely consider just how complex the process is when we speak or sing. Sound waves produced in our larynx are shifted and amplified by the geometry of our throats, mouths, sinus cavities, tongues, and lips. This video provides a glimpse of that hidden complexity through a trained vocalist singing inside an MRI machine. He sings the same aria in four distinctly different vocal styles, and it’s incredible to watch all the changes his tongue, lips, and soft palette go through to produce those different sounds. (Image and video credit: T. Ross; via Flow Vis)

Sliding Foams
What happens when a foam interacts with a sliding surface? That’s the question at the heart of this study, which finds three major regimes of foam-surface interaction. On smooth surfaces (Image 1), foams will simply slide against the wall without sticking or deforming. When surface roughness is about as large as the foam’s wall thickness (Image 2), the foam will stick to individual asperities, then slip to the next rough spot as the wall moves. But when the surface roughness is large compared to the foam wall (Image 3), the foam will remain anchored to the surface and all the shear from the wall’s movement goes into deforming the bulk of the foam.
Researchers thus found they could change foam’s behavior by changing the surface roughness. They also looked at the reverse situation: a surface with fixed roughness — like, say, a human tongue — and how tuning the size of foam bubbles might alter perception and ease of swallowing. That’s what we’re looking at in the last image, where a spoon slides a foam along a surface with roughness similar to the human tongue. (Image and research credit: M. Marchand et al.)





























