Tag: physics

  • Inside the Earth’s Mantle

    Inside the Earth’s Mantle

    Plate tectonics is a relatively young scientific theory, only gaining traction among geologists in the late 60s and early 70s. One key tenet of the theory is subduction where plates meet and one is forced down into the mantle, like in this illustration of the subduction zone near Japan. In early incarnations of the theory what happens to that subducting slab of rock once it’s in the mantle were ignored. But over the decades, geologists have built maps of the interior of our planet through the seismic waves they record. What they’ve found is that the continental chunks that break off and sink can have long-lasting effects.

    Beneath the Earth’s crust, the mantle behaves like an extremely slow-moving fluid under incredibly high temperatures and pressures. It can take tens of millions of years, but those broken slabs sink through the mantle, dragging fluid with them. This creates a large-scale flow known as a mantle wind, which can have far-reaching effects at the Earth’s surface. Through modeling and simulation, geologists have found these deep mantle flows may explain why mountain ranges like the Himalayas and Andes didn’t grow until millions of years after their plates collided and why earthquakes sometimes occur far from plate boundaries. For more, check out this great article from Ars Technica. (Image credit: British Geological Survey; via Ars Technica; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)

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    “Magic Fluids”

    In his short film, “Magic Fluids,” Roman De Giuli uses cyan, magenta, and yellow paints to generate a rainbow of macro colors. All the fluid motion you see is a practical effect, painstakingly created by layering paints and flow mediums of different densities. Like in Siqueiros’ “accidental painting” technique, the less dense paints will eventually rise through the upper layers and spread. De Giuli uses the effect for its motion, but the same physics is key for many artists who use acrylic pouring to paint. (Video and image credit: R. De Giuli)

  • Understanding Wildfire

    Understanding Wildfire

    Wildfires are an ongoing challenge in the western United States, where droughts and warmer conditions have combined with a century of fire suppression to form perfect conditions for monstrous fires. It’s long been understood that ambient winds can drive spreading fire, but the connection between wildfire and wind is more complicated than this.

    The heat of a fire drives buoyant air to rise, creating tower-like updrafts in a flame front. We see this both in the shape of the grass fire above, and in the wind vectors of a simulated grass fire in the lower image. Between those towers are troughs where cooler ambient wind is drawn in to replace the rising air. How a fire spreads will depend on the speed, direction, and temperature of these winds. A hot wind fed by the fire’s heat will raise the temperature of fuel in unburned areas, bringing it closer to ignition. In contrast, cooler ambient winds can hinder a fire by keeping nearby grass and twigs too cool to ignite. (Image credit: fire – M. Finney/US Forest Service; simulation – R. Linn; research credit: R. Linn et al.; for more, see Physics Today)

  • Surfing Honeybees

    Surfing Honeybees

    Honeybees have superpowers when it comes to their aerodynamics and impressive pollen-carrying, but their talents don’t end in the air. A new study confirms that honeybees can surf. Wet bees cannot fly–their wings are too heavy for them to get aloft when wet–but falling into a pond isn’t the end for a foraging honeybee.

    Instead, the bee flaps its wings, using them like hydrofoils to lift and push the water. This action generates enough thrust to propel the bee three body lengths per second. It’s a workout the bee can only maintain for a few minutes at a time, but researchers estimate honeybees could cover 5-10 meters in that time. Once ashore, the bee spends a few minutes drying itself, and then flies away no worse for the wear. (Image and research credit: C. Roh and M. Gharib; via NYTimes; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)

  • Adapting to the Flow

    Adapting to the Flow

    Simulating fluid dynamics computationally is no simple task. One of the major challenges is that flows typically consist of many different lengthscales, from the very large to the extremely tiny. In theory, correctly capturing the physics of the flow requires computing all of those scales, and that means having a very close, dense grid of points at which the physics must be calculated during every time step of a simulation. Even for a relatively simple flow, this quickly balloons into a prohibitively expensive problem. It simply takes a computer far too long to calculate solutions for so many points.

    One technique that’s been developed to save time is Adaptive Mesh Refinement. You can see an example of it above. The background is a grid of points that are far from one another in places where the flow isn’t changing and are tightly spaced in areas where the rising flames are most changeable. Adaptive Mesh Refinement algorithms automatically change these grid points on the fly, adding more where they’re needed and subtracting them where they aren’t. The end result is a much faster computational result that doesn’t sacrifice accuracy. Check out the videos below for some examples of this technique in action. (Video and image credit: N. Wimer et al.)

  • Jovian Vortices

    Jovian Vortices

    Jupiter continues to mesmerize in the images from JunoCam. With enhanced contrast, the planet’s eddies look like swirls you could just lean forward and fall into. The complexity of the Jovian atmosphere’s mixing is just astounding. It’s like an ever-changing Impressionist painting brought to life. Check out full-size versions of these stunning images here and here. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Kevin M. Gill, 12; via Planetary Society; submitted by jpshoer)

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    “Stormscapes 4”

    Frightening as they can be in the moment, storms have a power and majesty all their own. I’ve never seen a better way to capture that than through timelapse, and photographer Nicolaus Wegner offers a great one in “Stormscapes 4″. I particularly like how his frame captures the motion of storms and how they shear, rotate, and billow as they evolve. With a quick glance upward, it’s easy to miss that motion, even if it is fundamental to these storms. Sit back and enjoy.  (Video and image credit: N. Wegner)

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    Creating Biofuel

    One production technique for biofuel converts agricultural waste through pyrolysis. These systems heat biomass particles in a mixture of sand and nitrogen gas until the biomass particles release tar and syngas, a key ingredient of biofuel. All this heating and mixing takes place in a fluidized bed, where the injected nitrogen gas helps the particle mixture move like a fluid.

    Building prototypes of these systems can be costly, so industry has largely relied on computational studies to predict performance. But capturing the complicated physics behind turbulent gas and particle interactions is tough, and some models discard key information in favor of faster and cheaper simulations. In this study, the authors found that clustering between particles has a major effect on syngas production, something that industrial studies must account for. 

    This is one of the challenges of computational fluid dynamics; although the codes have become more and more accessible over time, getting reliable results still requires a solid understanding of the strengths and limitations of each model used. (Image, video, and research credit: S. Beetham and J. Capecelatrosource; submitted by Jesse C.)

  • Swirling Vortex

    Swirling Vortex

    So much of fluid dynamics comes down to finding the right way to observe a flow. This image of a swirling tropical system was captured by an astronaut aboard the International Space Station in April 2019. The low sun angle at the time makes the shadows stretch long across the cloud tops, giving them greater definition as well as a tint of sunset color. As drastic as the system looks from this angle, it was a short-lived vortex that never made landfall, so it was never officially named. (Image credit: Expedition 59 Crew; via NASA Earth Observatory)

  • The Microscopic Ocean

    The Microscopic Ocean

    When you’re the size of plankton, water may as well be molasses. Viscosity rules at these scales, and swimming plankton leave distinctive wakes that are slow to dissipate. Fish that feed on plankton use these trails to find their prey. But this microscopic world is changing as the ocean warms.

    At higher temperatures, water is less viscous, and plankton wakes don’t last as long. To make matters worse for hungry fish, warmer waters have led to an explosion in a species of faster plankton, capable of moving hundreds of body lengths a second. This species is far more difficult to catch, which may explain some of the collapses we’re observing in populations of fish like cod and haddock. (Video and image credit: BBC Earth Lab)