Known as “The Land of Fire and Ice,” Iceland has some of the most striking landscapes around. Photographer Jennifer Esseiva captures auroras, waterfalls, geysers, rivers, and more in this series from her 2024 trip to the island. Every one of these images bears the fingerprints of fluid dynamics: plasma flows lighting up the night sky; rivers of lava that formed the land; rivers and oceans that carve through the landscape; and pressurized, superheated water that shoots up from underground plumbing. (Image credit: J. Esseiva; via Colossal)
Tag: fluid dynamics

Flooding the Mediterranean
Nearly 6 million years ago, the Mediterranean was cut off from the ocean and evaporated faster than rivers could replenish it. This created a salty desert that persisted until about 5.3 million years ago. One hypothesis — the Zanclean megaflood — suggests that the Mediterranean refilled rapidly through an erosion channel near the Strait of Gilbraltar. A new study bolsters the concept by identifying geological features near Sicily consistent with the megaflood.
The team point to a grouping of over 300 ridges near the Sicily Sill, once a land bridge dividing the eastern and western Mediterranean and now underwater. The ridges are layered in debris but aren’t streamlined, suggesting they were rapidly deposited by turbulent waters, and date to the period of the proposed flooding. For more on the Zanclean Flood, check out this older post. (Image credit: R. Klavins; research credit: A. Micallif et al.; via Gizmodo)

Dutch Water Works
The Netherlands have a long history of extraordinary public works when it comes to water management. With much of the country’s land lying at or below sea level, massive civil engineering infrastructure is a necessity. In this Practical Engineering video, Grady takes us on a tour of Dutch water works, from the centuries-old techniques that allowed farmers to claim arable land from marshes to the unbelievably massive structures that protect the Dutch coastline from flooding and storm surges.
For the Dutch, these projects, expensive as they are to build and maintain, are cheaper than the cost of inaction, as numerous devastating floods of the past have taught them. Although the goals are often the same — shortening the coastline, protecting land and people — the techniques are constantly evolving, especially as ecological needs of non-human species are taken into account. (Video and image credit: Practical Engineering)

Disappearing Sea Ice Ridges
As blocks of sea ice shift and float, they can press together, forming ridges spaced every few hundred meters or so. A new study uses aerial observations from recent decades to show that these sea ridges are getting smaller in both size and number, a smoothing of Arctic topography that has many consequences.
The team showed that the overall changes in the sea ridges correspond to a loss of older sea ice. The current smoother sea ice presents less drag to winds and currents, which might suggest that the ice is slower-moving, but instead the opposite seems true. Scientists are not sure why the ice is moving faster, though faster ocean currents may play a role.
Another consequence of smoother sea ice is wider, shallower melt ponds each summer. These wider ponds increase the amount of sunlight the ice absorbs, hastening melting even further. (Image credit: USGS; research credit: T. Krumpen et al.; via Eos)

Kolmogorov Turbulence
Turbulent flows are ubiquitous, but they’re also mindbogglingly complex: ever-changing in both time and space across length scales both large and small. To try to unravel this complexity, scientists use simplified model problems. One such simplification is Kolmogorov flow: an imaginary flow where the fluid is forced back and forth sinusoidally. This large-scale forcing puts energy into the flow that cascades down to smaller length scales through the turbulent energy cascade. Here, researchers depict a numerical simulation of a turbulent Kolmogorov flow. The colors represent the flow’s vorticity field. Notice how your eye can pick out both tiny eddies and larger clusters in the flow; those patterns reflect the multi-scale nature of turbulence. (Image credit: C. Amores and M. Graham)

“Trinity”
Inspired by the film Oppenheimer, artist Thomas Blanchard created “Trinity,” a short film imagining a nuclear explosion with macro-scale fluid motion. There’s clever video editing and compositing in this video, but no CGI. Instead, Blanchard filmed fire, sparklers, alcohol inks, pigments and more up close and in stunning detail. As always, his work is a reminder of the amazing possibilities of analog-based art. (Video and image credit: T. Blanchard)

Baseball’s Mysterious Rubbing Mud
Since 1938, every ball in Major League Baseball has been covered in a special “rubbing mud” harvested from a secret location in New Jersey. Although the league has tried in the past to replace the mud with an alternative, it’s never stuck. Researchers wondered just what makes this mud so special, so naturally, they brought some to the lab to study its composition and rheology.
The mud consists of clay, silt, and sand with a smattering of organic particles. The make-up was pretty typical of river mud in the region, although researchers noted a drop-off in large particle sizes that probably indicates some sieving. In terms of rheology, the mud is shear-thinning, meaning it behaves a bit like lotion. It sits solidly in the hand until it’s deformed, at which point it smoothly coats the surface as a liquid would.
So how does the mud change the baseballs? The researchers found three effects. First, the mud’s shear-thinning allowed it to fill in any pores or imperfections in the ball’s surface, creating a more uniform surface. Second, the dried mud’s residue doubled the ball’s contact adhesion. And, finally, the occasional large sand particles glued to the ball by the dried mud added friction. As the researchers put it, the rubbing mud “spreads like skin cream and grips like sandpaper.” (Image credit: L. Juarez; research credit: S. Pradeep et al.; via EOS)

How Sunflowers Follow the Sun
Sunflower blossoms face east, presenting their blooms to the morning sun and the bees that come exploring with it. But before they grow their massive flower, each plant spends the day following the sun, greeting it in the east and tracking it westward all day. Overnight, the plant reorients eastward to start over again. The motion occurs thanks to the plant internally shifting its water supply. During the day, it swells cells on the east-facing side of the plant, gradually lengthening that side and causing the plant to tip westward. At night, it switches to swelling the west-facing side. Why go to all this trouble? By following the sun, the plant is able to photosynthesize and grow more effectively. (Video and image credit: Deep Look)

Sunflower plants follow the sun during the day and reset overnight. 
Cooking Perfect Cacio e Pepe
In cooking, sometimes the simplest recipes are the toughest to master. Cacio e pepe — a classic three-ingredient Italian pasta — is an excellent example. Made properly, the sauce of cheese and black pepper combines with starchy water to coat the pasta in a uniform, cheesy sauce. Or, if you’re me, you wind up with a pasta sauce flecked with stringy clumps of melted cheese. Fortunately for those of us who have yet to master this one, a new research paper has us covered with tips to make the perfect cacio e pepe.
The key to that elusive silky sauce, they found, is the starch – water – cheese combination. Your water needs just the right amount of starch — they found that between 1 – 4% starch by (cheese) mass worked. If the starch concentration is too low (which can easily happen in pasta water), you’ll get the clumpy cheese mess that so frequently happens in my kitchen. Temperature is also critical; if the water is too hot when it’s added, then it can destabilize the sauce. Check out the pre-print’s Section V for the scientific, supposedly foolproof, recipe. I know I’ll be trying it! (Image credit: O. Kadaksoo; research credit: G. Bartolucci et al. pre-print; via APS News)

Bubbly Tornadoes Aspin
Rotating flows are full of delightful surprises. Here, the folks at the UCLA SpinLab demonstrate the power a little buoyancy has to liven up a flow. Their backdrop is a spinning tank of water; it’s been spinning long enough that it’s in what’s known as solid body rotation, meaning that the water in the tank moves as if it’s one big spinning object. To demonstrate this, they drop some plastic tracers into the water. These just drop to the floor of the tank without fluttering, showing that there’s no swirling going on in the tank. Then they add Alka-Seltzer tablets.
As the tablets dissolve, they release a stream of bubbles, which, thank to buoyancy, rise. As the bubbles rise, they drag the surrounding water with them. That motion, in turn, pulls water in from the surroundings to replace what’s moving upward. That incoming water has trace amounts of vorticity (largely due to the influence of friction near the tank’s bottom). As that vorticity moves inward, it speeds up to conserve angular momentum. This is, as the video notes, the same as a figure skater’s spin speeding up when she pulls in her arms. The result: a beautiful, spiraling bubble-filled vortex. (Video and image credit: UCLA SpinLab)




























