Tag: physics

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    The Tea Leaves Effect

    If you’ve ever stirred a cup of tea with loose leaves in it, you’ve probably noticed that the leaves tend to swirl into the center of the cup in a kind of inverted whirlpool. At first, this behavior can seem counter-intuitive; after all, a spinning centrifuge causes denser components to fly to the outside. In this video, Steve Mould steps through this phenomenon and how the balance of pressures, velocities, densities, and viscosity cause the effect. (Note that Mould uses the term “drag,” but what he’s really referring to is the boundary layer across the bottom of the container. But who wants to explain a boundary layer in a video when they can avoid it?) (Video and image credit: S. Mould)

    When liquid in a cup is stirred, the densest layers move to the center.
  • Bubbles in Turbulence

    Bubbles in Turbulence

    In nature and industry, swarms of bubbles* often encounter turbulence in their surrounding fluid. To study this situation, researchers used numerical simulation to observe bubbles across a range of density, viscosity, and surface tension values relative to their surroundings. They found that density differences between the two fluids made negligible changes to the way bubbles broke or coalesced.

    In contrast, viscosity played a much larger role. More viscous bubbles were less likely to deform and break, thanks to their increased rigidity. When looking at small deformations along the bubble interface, both density and viscosity had noticeable effects. With increasing bubble density, they observed more dimples on the interface; increasing the viscosity had the opposite effect, making the bubbles smoother. (Image credit: Z. Borojevic; research credit: F. Mangani et al.)

    *We usually think of bubbles as air or another gas contained within a liquid. But this study’s authors use the term “bubble” more broadly to mean any coherent bits of fluid in a different surrounding fluid. Colloquially, this means their results apply to both bubbles and drops.

  • Actinoform Clouds

    Actinoform Clouds

    Flower-shaped actinoform clouds, like those seen on the left side of this satellite image, were only discovered in the 1960s once satellite imagery allowed meteorologists to identify cloud structures that were too large to recognize from the ground. Often appearing over the ocean, these clouds can stretch over hundreds of kilometers, bringing drizzling rain.

    This particular set of actinoform clouds have some distinctive neighbors in the right side of the image, where V-shaped slashes through the cloud cover mark the origins of two von Karman vortex streets. The vortex streets appear downwind of two rocky islands, Alejandro Selkirk Island and Robinson Crusoe Island. (Image credit: L. Dauphin; via NASA Earth Observatory)

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    “Timedrift II”

    As a teenager, I climbed Mount Kilimanjaro. The final ascent began around midnight, and we climbed through the dark, through sunrise, and into the early morning. I remember pausing at one point, just as the sun was rising, and looking out at the clouds thousands of meters below. From that height, they looked like an ocean, rippled with lavender waves. Timelapse films like this one, by filmmaker Martin Heck, remind me of that morning and the sense that I had of the sky as an ocean, flowing, crashing, and surging in ways we cannot appreciate until we slow down and look closer. (Image and video credit: M. Heck/Timestorm Films)

  • Rotating Waves of Grains

    Rotating Waves of Grains

    Rotating drums are a popular way to explore granular dynamics. Here, researchers fill a cylinder (seen below) with heavy grains and a low-viscosity fluid, then rotate the mixture about a horizontal axis. This sets up a contest between centrifugal forces and gravitational forces on the grains. At the right rotation rates, the grains form annular rings around the outside of the cylinder, where they rotate at a different speed than the fluid. This difference in speed between the two layers can trigger a Kelvin-Helmholtz instability and cause waves along the interface between the grains and the fluid, as seen in the examples above. (Image and research credit: V. Dyakova and D. Polezhaev; top image adapted by N. Sharp)

    Image of the experimental apparatus when not rotating.
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    Inside a Metal Vortex

    What do you get when you combine liquid gallium, a blender, and a special probe lens? Some pretty wild slow-mo video of a liquid metal vortex, courtesy of the Slow Mo Guys. This video is almost as notable for its set-up as it is for the high-speed footage, given the lengths Gav and Dan go to in order to get the shot! (Image and video credit: The Slow Mo Guys)

  • Neptune’s Seasonal Changes

    Neptune’s Seasonal Changes

    Ice giant Neptune orbits our sun once every 165 years, meaning that each season on the planet lasts about 41 years here on Earth. Currently, the side of Neptune facing us is entering early summer, but a recent survey of atmospheric measurements show that Neptune’s stratosphere is experiencing some unexpected changes. Between 2003 and 2018, the team found that global stratospheric temperatures actually decreased by 8 degrees Celsius. Even more dramatically, Neptune’s southern pole warmed by a full 11 degrees Celsius between 2018 and 2020. Both results hint that atmospheric patterns on the planet may be far more complex than current models assume. (Image credit: NASA/JPL; research credit: M. Roman et al.; via Physics World)

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    Escaping the Flood

    Fire ants clump together into giant rafts to stay alive during floods. But these rafts won’t form with just any number of ants. Researchers found that individual ants will actually kick one another away. It’s not until there are about ten ants that the raft formation becomes stable. In this video, the team lays out their experiments and models for fire ant rafting, showing that capillary action helps draw the raft together and individual ants’ activity can destabilize rafts if they’re too small. (Image and video credit: H. Ko and D. Hu)

  • “Metamorphe”

    “Metamorphe”

    A smoke-like haze drifts over surreal landscapes in the “Metamorphe” series by Reuben Wu and Jenni Pasanen. Though fluidic in appearance, these pieces are a merger between Wu’s drone light photography and Pasanen’s AI-assisted digital creations. Even so, the images are extremely evocative of fluid motion, connected as they are to human senses (like smell, hearing, and touch) that often rely directly on fluid dynamics. For more, check out the artists’ sites and Instagram. (Image credits: R. Wu and J. Pasanen; via Colossal)

  • Swimming Together

    Swimming Together

    Scientists have long pondered the possibilities of hydrodynamic benefits to the ways fish school. But most analyses of schooling have assumed a fixed spacing that’s far more orderly than what we observe in nature. In this experiment, researchers instead used a pair of robotic swimmers (essentially hydrofoils) to explore a range of swimming formations. What they found was a map of places where a second swimmer could easily “lock in” to a position relative to the leader and have their positioning stabilized by interactions with the leader’s wake (lower image). Interestingly, the beneficial regions extend much further downstream for fish positioned diagonally to the leader than they do for one directly following. With such a wide range of easily-stabilized following positions, it’s no wonder that schools of fish are amorphous instead of strictly crystalline! (Image credit: top – S. Pena Lambarri, map – J. Newbolt et al.; research credit: J. Newbolt et al.)

    The shaded areas of this map represent areas where a second swimmer can passively "lock-in" relative to the leader's position, shown in gray. This data is based on tests with robotic swimmers.
    The shaded areas of this map represent areas where a second swimmer can passively “lock-in” relative to the leader’s position, shown in gray. This data is based on tests with robotic swimmers.