Tag: fluid dynamics

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    Behind the San Antonio River Walk

    How do you manage necessary updates to an iconic landmark like the San Antonio River Walk without disrupting its function? That’s the concept behind this Practical Engineering video, which shows how the city removed and replaced two control gates for the River Walk without ever changing the water level. It’s a neat view both into the engineering of civil water infrastructure and into the practical considerations of how construction on these systems works. (Video credit: Practical Engineering)

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  • An Exoplanet’s Supersonic Jet Stream

    An Exoplanet’s Supersonic Jet Stream

    WASP-127b is a hot Jupiter-type exoplanet located about 520 light-years from us. A new study of the planet’s atmosphere reveals a supersonic jet stream whipping around its equatorial region at 9 kilometers per second. For comparison, our Solar System’s fastest winds, on Neptune, are a comparatively paltry 0.5 kilometers per second. The team estimates the speed of sound — which depends on temperature and the atmosphere’s chemical make-up — on WASP-127b as about 3 kilometers per second, far below the measured wind speed. The planet’s poles, in contrast, are much colder and have far lower wind speeds.

    Of course, these measurements can only give us a snapshot of what the exoplanet’s atmosphere is like; we don’t have altitude data, for example, to see how the wind speed varies with height. Nevertheless, it shows that exoplanets beyond our planetary system can have some unimaginably wild weather. (Video and image credit: ESO/L. Calรงada; research credit: L. Nortmann et al.; via Gizmodo)

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    Galloping Bubbles

    A buoyant bubble rises until it’s stopped by a wall. What happens, this video asks, if that wall vibrates up and down? If the vibration is large enough, the bubble loses its symmetry and starts to gallop along the wall. Using numerical simulations, the team determined the flow around the bubble. They also demonstrate several possible applications for this behavior: sorting bubbles by size, traversing mazes, and cleaning a surface. (Video and image credit: J. Guan et al.)

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    “Lively”

    In “Lively,” filmmaker Christopher Dormoy zooms in on ice. He shows ice forming and melting, capturing bubbles and their trails, as well as the subtle flows that go on in and around the ice. By introducing blue dye, he highlights some of the internal flows we would otherwise miss. (Video and image credit: C. Dormoy)

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    Explosively Jetting

    Dropping water from a plastic pipette onto a pool of oil electrically charges the drop. Then, as it evaporates, it shrinks and concentrates the charges closer and closer. Eventually, the strength of the electrical charge overcomes surface tension, making the drop form a cone-shaped edge that jets out tiny, highly-charged microdrops. Afterward, the drop returns to its spherical shape… until shrinkage builds up the charge density again. This microjetting behavior can carry on for hours! (Video and image credit: M. Lin et al.; research preprint: M. Lin et al.)

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    How CO2 Gets Into the Ocean

    Our oceans absorb large amounts of atmospheric carbon dioxide. Liquid water is quite good at dissolving carbon dioxide gas, which is why we have seltzer, beer, sodas, and other carbonated drinks. The larger the surface area between the atmosphere and the ocean, the more quickly carbon dioxide gets dissolved. So breaking waves — which trap lots of bubbles — are a major factor in this carbon exchange.

    This video shows off numerical simulations exploring how breaking waves and bubbly turbulence affect carbon getting into the ocean. The visualizations are gorgeous, and you can follow the problem from the large-scale (breaking waves) all the way down to the smallest scales (bubbles coalescing). (Video and image credit: S. Pirozzoli et al.)

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  • Flushing the Brain During Sleep

    Flushing the Brain During Sleep

    When we sleep, our brains flush out waste that builds up during our waking hours, but how this happens has been something of a mystery. A new study of sleeping mice has visualized and tracked the flow for the first time. The researchers found that, during a specific sleep phase (the non-rapid eye movement portion), the mice released pulses of norepinephrine — a cousin to adrenaline — that periodically contracted blood vessels in the rodents’ brains. As these blood vessels contract and relax, it forces the nearby cerebrospinal fluid to flow. In short, the pulsing of the blood vessels pumps the fluid bathing the brain, flushing it.

    The team also found that certain medications — like the sleep aid Ambien — disrupted this flow in mice by suppressing the blood vessels’ oscillations. It’s not known yet whether our brains operate on the same pumping principle or whether medications could affect that, but it does suggest that a similar study in humans is worthwhile. (Image credit: K. Howard; research credit: N. Hauglund et al.; via Science)

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    A Pitcher Plant’s Rain-Triggered Trap

    Pitcher plants all use slippery rims and sticky digestive juices to capture and trap their insect prey. But two species of pitcher plant independently evolved an extra trap: a rain-activated springboard lid. Both the Seychelles pitcher plant and the slender pitcher plant — separated geographically by 6000 kilometers — have a springy, near-horizontal “lid” that sticks out over their pitcher. The underside of the surface is slippery, though less so than the pitcher’s lip and walls. Unsuspecting ants crawl under the lid, confident that they can keep their footing, and then — bang — a rain drop hits the springboard. That impact catapults the insect directly into the drink. There’s no escaping now.

    How did two widely separated, independently evolving plants both settle on this technique? Scientists think it was random chance. Pitcher plants are highly variable in their pitcher size, shape, and features. The scientists suggest that by trying lots of random combinations, these two species hit upon a particular arrangement that works really well for them. (Video and image credit: Science)

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  • “Waterfall Wonder”

    “Waterfall Wonder”

    The Semeru volcano rises in the background of this photo of Java’s Tumpak Sewa waterfall by Joan de la Malla. Rain that falls on the volcano slides down its flank and wanders through the jungle on its way to the spectacular 120-meter-high waterfall. From the clouds wreathing the mountain through the jungle’s drifting fogs to the mists of the falls, this portrait highlights the many forms water takes on its journey. (Image credit: J. de la Malla/WPOTY; via Colossal)

  • Peering Inside a Hailstone

    Peering Inside a Hailstone

    In spring and summer, major thunderstorms can include dangerous and destructive hailstones. In Catalonia, a group of scientists collected hailstones after a record-breaking 2022 storm, finding some as large as 12 centimeters across. Using a dentist’s CT scanner, they looked at the interior of the hailstones, uncovering layers that reveal how the hail grew. In the past, researchers have studied hail by slicing the ice; that method gives them only a single cross-section through the hailstone, which gets destroyed in the process. In contrast, a CT scan revealed the full interior of the ice.

    The scientists found that, even though hail often appears spherical, the nucleus of the hail is not always located in the center. They saw that the hail grew in uneven layers that varied in density, depending on the storm conditions the hail experienced. To get to the enormous sizes seen here, hailstones have to travel up and down repeatedly through a storm, building up layer by layer. From the hail’s interior structure, the team could also tell what orientation the hail took its final fall in; the ice along the bottom of the hailstone was bubble-free, indicating that it collected as water drops hit the surface and froze. (Image credit: T. Ribas; research credit: C. Barquรฉ et al.; via New Scientist)

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