Tag: physics

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    Tokyo 2020: Future Swim Tech

    Recent controversies over swimsuit technologies haven’t damped the creativity of Speedo’s marketing staff. They recently unveiled Fastskin 4.0, a futuristic concept designed for the swimmers of 2040*. They’ve envisioned a custom-made, biodegradable, self-powered swimsuit that looks like a superhero’s costume. Some of the technologies strike me as extremely pie-in-the-sky, but a few of them have at least some basis in reality. Of particular interest to us, of course, are the Dynamic Flow Zones and the Shark Skin Boosters, two features intended to minimize drag and boost speed.

    The Dynamic Flow Zones seem to be part of a built-in exoskeleton around the swimmer’s midriff, and they are apparently inspired by the underbelly of whales. At least one study shows that similar ridges on whale sharks help reduce flow separation on their bodies, but — given the vastly different swim styles of a human and a whale shark — it’s unclear to me that these structures would help a human swimmer. It also seems as though their helpfulness would be strongly dependent on what stroke the swimmer was using.

    As for the Shark Skin Boosters, a shark’s skin does, in fact, helps its speed and agility. Individual denticles on the shark can (passively) bristle when flow near the skin tries to reverse direction. The adaptation helps them shut down flow separation before it happens, thereby maintaining flow control and low drag. Additionally, studies of 3D-printed shark skin have shown that the right texture can provide a speed boost. It would take some work to figure out just the right texture to adapt the shark’s ability to a human swimmer, but this is one feature of Fastskin 4.0 that isn’t just science fiction. (Image and video credit: Speedo; via Gizmodo)

    *To be 100% clear, this product does not exist and likely never will.

    Join us all this week for more Olympic-themed fluid dynamics!

  • Tokyo 2020: Sailing Physics

    Tokyo 2020: Sailing Physics

    At first glance, sailboats don’t look much like an airplane, but physics-wise, they’re closely related. Both the sail and hull of a sailboat act like wings turned on their side. Just as with airplane wings, the driving force for a sail comes from a difference in pressure across the two sides of the sail. The same effects applied to the hull and its keel (the wing-like extension that sits below the hull) provide the force that keeps a sailboat from slipping sideways as it cuts a path through wind and water.

    Like airplane wings, sailboats also generate tip vortices: one from the top of the sail, the other from the bottom of the keel. Those vortices are typically invisible, but in foggy weather, like in the photo below, you can see the tracks they leave behind. (Image credits: top – Ludomił; bottom – D. Forster; research credit: B. Anderson; submitted by Lluís J.)

    The vortices from sailboats leave tracks in the fog.

    Follow along all this week and next as we celebrate the Olympics with sports-themed fluid dynamics.

  • Tokyo 2020: Volleyball Aerodynamics

    Tokyo 2020: Volleyball Aerodynamics

    Like footballs and baseballs, the trajectory of a volleyball is strongly influenced by aerodynamics. When spinning, the ball experiences a difference in pressure on either side, which causes it to swerve, per the Magnus effect. But volleyball also has the float serve, which like the knuckleball in baseball, uses no spin. 

    In this case, how the ball behaves depends strongly on the way the ball is made. Some volleyballs use smooth panels, while others have surfaces modified with dimples or honeycomb patterns, and researchers found that these subtle changes make a big difference in aerodynamics. A float serve’s trajectory is unpredictable because the ball will swerve whenever air near the surface of the ball on one side goes turbulent or separates. And without spin to influence that transition, everything comes down to the ball’s speed and its surface.

    Researchers found that volleyballs with patterned surfaces transition to turbulence at lower speeds, which makes their behavior more predictable overall. But players who want to maximize the unpredictability of their float serve might prefer smooth-paneled balls, which don’t make the transition until higher speeds. (Image credit: game – Pixabay, volleyballs – U. Tsukuba; research credit: S. Hong et al.T. Asai et al.; via Ars Technica)

    Stick around all this week and next for more Olympic-themed fluid physics!

  • “The Goblet of Fire”

    “The Goblet of Fire”

    Sometimes the mundane events of life hide extraordinary phenomena. This award-winning photograph by Sarang Naik shows yellow-brown spores streaming off a mushroom during monsoon season. The plume is abstract and beautiful; you could easily mistake it for the flames of an Olympic torch. But common as they are, the lowly mushroom hides interesting depths. To get their spores to travel further, mushrooms actually generate their own breezes! (Image credit: S. Naik; via Big Picture Competition)

    With the Olympics kicking off today, FYFD will follow our usual tradition of Olympic-themed posts for the next couple weeks, so be sure to come back each day for the latest featured sport!

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    Pump Problems

    Pumps are a critical piece of infrastructure, but to keep them operating, engineers have to account for several potential pitfalls. In this Practical Engineering video, Grady discusses some of the common fluid dynamical effects that can destroy a pump and its performance. As you’ll see in the video, a lot of the challenges boil down to keeping air out of the pump. Since air and water are vastly different in their density and compressibility, most pumps cannot handle both of them at the same time. Pumps need to be primed to displace any air inside them and allow them to develop the suction needed to pump water. On the other hand, too much suction can create cavitation, which damages pump parts. And, finally, the intake systems for pumps have to be designed to keep air from getting sucked in. If nothing else, having too much air in the lines reduces the pump’s efficiency. (Image and video credit: Practical Engineering)

  • Contact-Line Dissipation

    Contact-Line Dissipation

    In the confines of a narrow tube, a flow’s energy gets dissipated in two places: inside the bulk fluid and along the contact line. The former is standard for all flows; viscosity acts like internal friction in the fluid and dissipates a flow’s kinetic energy into heat. Contact line dissipation is trickier. While it isn’t hard to imagine that a moving contact line would dissipate energy, it’s been unclear just how much energy the contact line eats up.

    To answer that question, researchers performed a novel experiment using an extremely narrow capillary tube, initially filled with air. By dipping one end of a horizontal tube in an oil reservoir, they sucked some oil into the tube. Then they set the oil-filled end of the tube against a water reservoir, causing it to suck up water. The oil slug then moves along the tube at a constant speed, which enables the team to separate out the two sources of dissipation. They found that contact-line dissipation accounted for a surprisingly large amount of the overall dissipation — between 20 and 50 percent, depending on the length of the oil slug! (Image credit: N. Sharp; research credit and submission: B. Primkulov et al.)

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    Mud Pots

    Mud pots, or mud volcanoes, form when volcanic gases escape underlying magma and rise through water and earth to form bubbling mud pits. I had the chance to watch some at Yellowstone National Park a few years ago and they are bizarrely fascinating. In this Physics Girl video, Dianna recounts her adventures in trying to locate some mud pots in southern California and explains the geology that enables them there. And if you haven’t seen it yet, check out her related video on the only known moving mud puddle! (Image and video credit: Physics Girl)

  • Devising Greener Chemistry

    Devising Greener Chemistry

    Not all microfluidic devices use tiny channels to pump and mix fluids. Some, like the Vortex Fluidic Device (VFD), conduct their microfluidic mixing in thin films of fluid. The VFD is essentially a tube spinning at several thousand RPM that can be tilted to various angles. Coriolis forces, shear, and Faraday instabilities in the thin fluid film create a complex microfluidic flow field that’s excellent for mixing, crystallization, and processing of injected chemicals. One rather notorious application of this device was unboiling an egg, a feat for which the researchers won an Ig Nobel Prize. But other, more practical applications abound, including a waste-free method for coating particles. (Image and research credit: T. Alharbi et al.; video credit: Flinders University; via Cosmos; submitted by Marc A.)

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    Inside Old-Fashioned Butter

    Today’s video is a little different: it’s an inside look at a butter-making shop in France that uses traditional nineteenth-century methods to process the butter. Watching workers fold and shape 50 kilos of butter is mesmerizing, and it highlights the amorphous, pseudo-fluid nature of the butter. Yes, the butter holds its shape like a solid, but it’s a soft solid at best and certainly shows fluid-like qualities when force is applied. A word of warning: you might not want to watch this on an empty stomach! (Image and video credit: Art Insider; via Colossal)

  • Suspended Sediments in Lake Erie

    Suspended Sediments in Lake Erie

    Lake Erie’s Long Point is outlined in turquoise in this natural-color satellite image. The pale color is likely due to limestone sediments in the shallow waters getting resuspended by a seiche or other disturbance. A seiche is a standing wave that forms in a partially- or fully-bounded body of water; in Lake Erie they are typically wind- and weather-driven. (Image credit: J. Stevens/USGS; via NASA Earth Observatory)