This high-speed schlieren video reveals the ignition of a butane lighter. The schlieren optical technique exaggerates differences in refractive index caused by density variations, enabling experimentalists to see thermal eddies, shock waves, and other phenomena invisible to the naked eye. Here a jet of butane shoots upward from the lighter as a valve is released. Then the spark from the lighter ignites the butane gas near the bottom of the jet. A flame front the propagates outward and upward, completing the lighting process. (submitted by @Mark_K_Quinn)
Tag: fluid dynamics

Cloud Streets from Space
Cloud streets flowing south across Bristol Bay hit the Shishaldin and Pavlof volcanoes, which part the air flow into distinctive swirls called von Karman vortex streets. As air flows around the volcano, a vortex is shed first on one side, then the other. Although the usual example for this type of flow is the wake of a cylinder, vortex streets can extend behind any non-aerodynamic body immersed in a flow. The same phenomenon is responsible for the singing of power lines in the wind. As astronaut Dan Burbank observes, “It’s classic aerodynamics, but on a thousands of miles scale.” (Photo credit: Dan Burbank, NASA)

Staining Patterns
This timelapse video shows a particulate suspension as it dries and the pattern formation that results. The mixture of silicon dioxide particles and water is spread over a glass slide. As the water evaporates, capillary action generates a flow toward the edges, but the fluid meniscus pins larger particles to the glass, trapping them. As more and more water evaporates, smaller particles are trapped, causing the formation of uneven stripes in the particulate deposits. You’ve probably seen these patterns before on the side of a muddy car after a rainy day! (See also: how coffee rings form; Video credit: Bjornar Sandnes)

Worthington Jet
A drop of sugar syrup falls into a pool of methylated spirits, producing a Worthington jet and several ejected droplets. Although surface tension holds the jet in a smooth shape, the refractive index of the spirits reveals the turbulent mixing within the jet. (Photo credit: Rebecca Ing)

Sloshing to Dampen
In this high-speed video, two flexible spheres are dropped from the same height. The one on the left is filled with air, the other is partially filled with a liquid. Although both spheres rebound to nearly the same height after the first bounce, their behavior differs drastically after that. The sloshing of the liquid inside the sphere acts as a damper, absorbing energy that would otherwise cause the ball to continue bouncing. The effects of contained liquids sloshing are important for understanding the dynamics of tankers, fuel on spacecrafts, and even how to walk without spilling your coffee.

Fragmenting Raindrops
This numerical simulation demonstrates the fragmentation of droplets of water falling through a quiescent medium–essentially how a raindrop behaves. As the initial droplet falls, drag forces deform the droplet, contorting it until surface tension causes it to break into smaller droplets, which can themselves be broken up by the same mechanisms.

Star-Shaped Nozzles
Efficient mixing of fluids is vital for many applications, including fuel injection for all types of combustion and masking the exhaust of stealth fighters. Star-shaped lobed nozzles can produce jets that mix more effectively than conventional jets. This photo shows cross-sections of the jet at several downstream distances from the nozzle exit. (Photo credit: H. Hu et al)

Breakup of an Annular Sheet
A thin annular sheet of water is sandwiched between two concentric air streams. This airflow on either side of the water causes shearing and Kelvin-Helmholtz-type instabilities develop, causing the sinuous waves along the water surface. Periodic behavior of the sort observed here is frequently observed in fluid mechanical instabilities. #

Viscous Fluid Falling on a Moving Belt
In this video a very viscous (but still Newtonian) fluid is falling in a stream onto a moving belt. Initially, the belt is moving quickly enough that the viscous stream creates a straight thread. As the belt is slowed, the stream begins to meander sinusoidally and ultimately begins to coil. Aside from some transient behavior when the speed of the belt is changed very quickly, the behavior of the thread is very consistent within a particular speed regime. This is indicative of a nonlinear dynamical system; each shift in behavior due to the changing speed of the belt is called a bifurcation and can be identified mathematically from the governing equation(s) of the system. (Video credit: S. Morris et al)

Separation and Stall
This flow visualization of a pitching wind turbine blade demonstrates why lift and drag can change so drastically with angle of attack. When the angle the blade makes with the freestream is small, flow stays attached around the top and bottom surfaces of the blade. At large (positive or negative) angles of attack, the flow separates from the turbine blade, beginning at the trailing edge and moving forward as the angle of attack increases. The separated flow appears as a region of recirculation and turbulence. This is the same mechanism responsible for stall in aircraft. (Submitted by Bobby E)



