Tag: fluid dynamics

  • Featured Video Play Icon

    Can Explosions Deflect Bullets?

    In one of their most Mythbusters-like videos ever, the Slow Mo Guys ask: can an explosion deflect a bullet? To find out, they built out a system to trigger a C4 explosive using a 9mm bullet, all while watching with a series of high-speed cameras. As you’d expect, there are lots of blast waves and neat flame propagation to watch. As for the fundamental question, well, you’ll have to watch to find out! (Video and image credit: The Slow Mo Guys)

  • Swarm of Surfers

    Swarm of Surfers

    Self-propelled objects can form fascinating patterns. Here, researchers investigate how small plastic “surfers” move on a vibrating fluid. Each surfer is heavier in its stern than its bow. When the fluid vibrates, the surfer creates waves that are asymmetric — deeper in the stern than at the bow. For single surfers, this imbalance propels the surfer in the direction of its bow. But with more than one surfer, other patterns form.

    The video demonstrates five of the seven patterns pairs of surfers exhibit.
    The video demonstrates five of the seven patterns pairs of surfers exhibit.

    The team looked at groups of surfers all the way up to eight members. Among pairs, the researchers found seven distinctive patterns, including orbiting groups, tailgaters, and promenading pairs. Larger groups, they found, had similar collective behaviors. They hope their surfers will be an easily accessible platform for exploring active matter. (Image and research credit: I. Ho et al.; via APS Physics)

  • “The Reef”

    “The Reef”

    Artist Alberto Seveso returns to his colorful ink plumes (1, 2, 3, 4, 5), but this time with a twist. Here, Seveso took ink injected in water and digitally altered it, adding texture and shaping the ink to mimic the shapes of coral reefs. The results are stunning, though I confess a few of them remind me of mushrooms or organs more than reefs. (Image credit: A. Seveso; via Colossal)

  • Droplet Medusa

    Droplet Medusa

    Vibration is one method for breaking a drop into smaller droplets, a process known as atomization. Here, researchers simulate this break-up process for a drop in microgravity. Waves crisscrossing the surface create localized craters and jets, making the drop resemble the Greek mythological figure of Medusa. With enough vibrational amplitude, the jets stretch to point of breaking, releasing daughter droplets. (Image and research credit: D. Panda et al.)

  • Controlling Finger Formation

    Controlling Finger Formation

    When gas is injected into thin, liquid-filled gaps, the liquid-gas interface can destabilize, forming distinctive finger-like shapes. In laboratories, this mechanism is typically investigated in the gap between two transparent plates, a setup known as a Hele-Shaw cell. In the past, researchers looking to control the instability have explored how surface tension, viscosity, and the elasticity of the gap itself affect the flows. But a new set of studies look at the compressibility of the gas being injected.

    The team found that viscous fingers formed later the higher the gas’s compressibility. That provides a potential control knob for people trying to exploit the mechanism, especially geologists. For geologists trying to extract oil, viscous fingering is detrimental, but, on the flip side, viscous fingers are desirable when injecting carbon dioxide for sequestration. With these results, users can tweak their injection characteristics to match their goals. (Image credit: C. Cuttle et al.; research credit: C. Cuttle et al. and L. Morrow et al.; via APS Physics)

  • Ciliary Pathlines

    Ciliary Pathlines

    For tiny creatures, swimming through water requires techniques very different than ours. Many, like this sea urchin larva, use hair-like cilia that they beat to push fluid near their bodies. The flows generated this way are beautiful and complex, as shown above. Importantly for the larva, the flows are asymmetric; that’s critical at these scales since any symmetric back-and-forth motion will keep the larva stuck in place. (Image credit: B. Shrestha et al.)

  • Ice Damages With Liquid Veins

    Ice Damages With Liquid Veins

    Water expands when it freezes, a fact that’s often blamed for ice-cracked roads. But expansion isn’t what gives ice its destructive power. In fact, liquids that contract when freezing also break up materials like pavement and concrete. A recent study pinpoints veins between ice crystals as the source of this infrastructure-cracking power.

    Ice doesn’t like to stick on most surfaces, so when it forms, there’s often a narrow gap between the ice and a solid surface. That gap fills with water, and that water, it turns out, doesn’t just sit there. Instead, grooves between ice crystals act like tiny straws that are frigid on the icy end and warmer on the end connected to water. As ice forms on the cold end, it creates a negative pressure gradient that draws liquid up the groove. This ‘cryosuction’ keeps pumping water into the ice, where it freezes and further expands the icy zone, as seen in the image below.

    Under a microscope, fluorescent particles show water (right side) getting pulled into an ice groove (left).
    Under a microscope, fluorescent particles show water (right side) getting pulled into an ice groove (left).

    If the ice is made up of a single crystal, this growth rate is very slow. But most ice is polycrystalline — made up of many crystals, all separated by these liquid-filled grooves. That, researchers found, is a recipe for fast growth and quickly-expanding ice capable of breaking concrete and other structures. (Image credits: pothole – I. Taylor, experiment – D. Gerber et al.; research credit: D. Gerber et al.; via APS Physics)

  • Featured Video Play Icon

    Dancing to Chopin

    Droplets of paint whirl to Chopin’s “Nocturne Op. 9 No. 2” in this short film from artist Thomas Blanchard. The glitter particles in the paints act as seed particles that highlight the flow within and around each drop. It’s a beautiful dance of surface tension, advection, and buoyancy. (Image and video credits: T. Blanchard; via Colossal)

  • Featured Video Play Icon

    Inside a Zebrafish Heart

    This glimpse inside a 5-day-old zebrafish’s heart shows why they’re often used as a model organism in cardiac studies. The fish’s heart rate is similar to humans and its two-chamber heart — one atrium and one ventricle, both seen here — serves as a simplified version of ours. Check out the slowed-down section of the video to clearly see blood filling and expanding one chamber before it’s pumped onward. Perhaps the most unusual feature of the zebrafish’s heart is its ability to regenerate; after amputation of up to 20% of its ventricle, the fish can fully regenerate its heart. That’s a pretty incredible recovery, especially when you consider that the heart has to keep pumping the entire time! (Video credit: M. Weber/2023 Nikon Small World in Motion Competition)

  • Granular Gaps

    Granular Gaps

    Push air into a gap filled with a viscous fluid, and you’ll get the branching, dendritic pattern of a Saffman-Taylor instability. Here, researchers use a similar set-up: injection into a narrow gap between transparent planes to explore something quite different. In this experiment, the gap was initially filled with a mixture of air and tiny hydrophobic glass beads. When the team injected a viscous mixture of water and glycerol, new patterns emerged. At low injection rates, a single finger structure formed. But at high injection rates, a whole spoke-like pattern formed. (Image and research credit: D. Zhang et al.; via Physics Today)