Sometimes everyday materials are more fluid than they seem. In 1927, Professor Thomas Parnell of the University of Queensland started what is now the longest continuously running laboratory experiment when he filled a sealed glass funnel with a sample of heated tar pitch. After allowing 3 years for the pitch to settle, the funnel’s stem was unsealed and the pitch has been slowly dripping ever since. Now, over 80 years later, the ninth drop is still just forming. No one has witnessed the fall of a pitch drop but the odds are good that someone will catch the ninth drop now that it has its own webfeed. The experiment, which won an Ig Nobel Prize in 2005, demonstrates the incredibly high viscosity of pitch, which the researchers estimated at 11 orders of magnitude larger than water at room temperature. (submitted by jshoer)
Tag: physics

Solar Tornadoes
NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory captured this video of swirls of darker, cooler plasma caught between competing magnetic forces over the course of 30 hours. The plasma strands rotate like tornadoes caught on magnetic field lines. It sometimes feels incredible to observe such familiar-looking fluid behavior in such unfamiliar places, but it’s just a reminder that physics works no matter where you are.

Reader Question: Rocket Propulsion
staunchreality-deactivated20120 asks:
Hey there – Love the blog. Most interesting science blog I follow 🙂 This may be a silly question – is propulsion through space purely a function of exit velocity and catching gravity slingshots around planets, or is there enough of anything to push against for rocket propulsion?
Thanks! Glad you enjoy the blog. And your question is not silly at all.
Whether in the atmosphere or not, rocket engines always operate on the same principle: Newton’s 3rd law. For every force exerted, there is an equal and opposite reaction force. For a rocket, this means that the momentum of the rocket exhaust provides forward momentum–thrust–for the rocket. When acting in an atmosphere, the exhaust doesn’t push against the atmosphere in order to move the rocket–in fact, rockets have to overcome aerodynamic drag when in the atmosphere, which opposes their thrust.

While the operating principle of a rocket remains the same regardless of its surrounding, the ambient pressure (essentially zero in space and non-zero in an atmosphere) does affect the efficiency of the rocket’s nozzle, which can affect the exit velocity of the exhaust, and, thus, the efficiency of the rocket. Under ideal conditions, the exhaust should exit the nozzle at the same pressure as the ambient conditions–whatever they are. If the exhaust pressure is lower than the ambient, the exhaust can separate from the nozzle, causing instabilities in the flow and potentially damaging the nozzle. On the other hand, if the exhaust pressure is too high, then there is exhaust that could be turned into thrust that is going to waste. Unfortunately, matching the exhaust pressure to the ambient pressure is a function of the geometry of the nozzle, which is usually fixed. Engineers of rockets intended to fly from within the atmosphere to space usually have to pick a particular altitude to design around and deal with the inefficiencies while the rocket flies at other ambient conditions.
Outside of the physical mechanics of how thrust is produced, propulsion in space is dominated by the influence of orbital mechanics. Once in an orbit, a spacecraft will stay on that orbital path without expending any thrust. To change between orbits, it is necessary for the spacecraft–rocket or otherwise–to change its velocity–typically referred to as delta-v–by firing an engine or thruster. It’s also possible to change orbits using the gravity of other celestial bodies (Jupiter is a popular one) to change a spacecraft’s delta-v without expending propellant. However, fluid dynamics don’t play a big role in the process aside from the problems of fuel sloshing aboard the spacecraft and the actual mechanism by which thrust is produced.

That said, if anyone is interested in getting a better feel for how orbit mechanics work, I have two recommendations. The first is to watch this video of water droplets “orbiting” a charged knitting needle aboard the ISS. And the second is to play the game Osmos. It is like rocket propulsion and orbit mechanics in action!
(Photo credits: NASA, The Aerospace Corporation, Hemisphere Games)

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.

Glass Isn’t a Fluid
Mark R writes:
Glass is a Fluid, Too
Post complex equations regarding how long it would take a certain window to flow, and post pictures of sunken glass. This would be educational.This is a pretty widespread myth. Actually, glass is not a fluid and does not behave like one as long as it is below the glass transition temperature. It’s a bit difficult to classify glass under the traditional categories for a solid due to its phase transition behavior and its lack of crystallization, but it is usually classed as an amorphous solid.
The observation that old panes of glass tend to be thicker at the bottom is usually used as evidence that glass flows over the centuries, but this assumes that the glass was flat to begin with. However, glassblowers at the time usually made panes by spinning molten glass to create a round, mostly even flat, which was then cut to fit. Although spinning made the glass mostly flat, the edges of the disc tended to be thinner. When installed, the glass was typically placed thicker side down for stability purposes. One researcher even calculated the time period necessary for glass to flow and deform at ordinary temperatures as 10^32 years–longer than the age of the universe.
If that is not convincing, consider this: if glass flows at a rate that’s discernible to the naked eye after a couple of centuries, then the effect of this deformation should be extremely noticeable in antique telescopes since a slight change in the lens’ optical properties should dramatically affect performance. But no such degradation occurs. (Photo credit: Vincent van der Pas)

Wave-Particle Duality in Bouncing Droplets
A droplet atop a vibrating pool is prevented from coalescing by the constant influx of air into a thin lubrication layer between it and the pool. But that is not the strangest aspect of its behavior. Researchers have found that this system demonstrates some aspects of the mind-bending wave-particle duality at the heart of quantum physics. (Submitted by Dan H.) #

Stone-Skipping Physics
Many people have learned to throw skipping stones across a pond or lake, but how many have considered the physics of how it happens? In this video, researchers use high-speed video to explore the skipping of various balls across water. The deformation of the ball as well as the shape of the cavity its impact creates determines whether it rebounds off the water’s surface.

The Coalescence Cascade
When a droplet impacts a pool at low speed, a layer of air trapped beneath the droplet can often prevent it from immediately coalescing into the pool. As that air layer drains away, surface tension pulls some of the droplet’s mass into the pool while a smaller droplet is ejected. When it bounces off the surface of the water, the process is repeated and the droplet grows smaller and smaller until surface tension is able to completely absorb it into the pool. This process is called the coalescence cascade.

Vortex Street Sim
This numerical simulation shows a von Karman vortex street in the wake of a bluff body. As flow moves over the object, vortices are periodically shed off the object’s upper and lower surfaces at a steady frequency related to the velocity of the flow. The simulation takes place in a channel; note how the thickness of the boundary layers on the walls increases with downstream distance, forcing a slight constriction on the vortex street in the freestream.

Sharkskin-Style Swimsuits
Fans of swimming will recall the controversies of the now-banned sharkskin-style swimsuits that helped break so many records in the past few years. The suits decrease drag on a swimmer both by making them more hydrodynamic in form and by drastically reducing skin friction where the water meets the swimmer’s body. In addition to decreasing the two major sources of drag on a swimmer, the compression provided by the material can help increase blood flow to muscles. These improvements came at a high material cost, though, and, since the technology was not viable for all athletes, it has since been banned.





