Tag: science

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    Self-Propelled Droplets

    Leidenfrost drops hover and move above hot surfaces on a thin layer of their own vapor. Over a flat surface, this vapor flows radially out from under the droplet, but creating rachets in the surface forces the vapor to flow in a single direction. The vapor then acts like exhaust, generating propulsion in the droplet and making it roll. How quickly the drop moves depends both on the droplet’s size and the rachets’ aspect ratio. For a given length, deeper rachets propel a drop faster than their shallower counterparts. The droplet’s size also affects the thrust with different scalings depending on the drop’s initial size. Like all of this week’s videos, this video is an entry in the 2013 Gallery of Fluid Motion. (Video credit: A. G. Marin et al.)

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    Shaping and Levitating Droplets

    Opposing ultrasonic speakers can be used to trap and levitate droplets against gravity using acoustic pressure. Changes to field strength can do things like bring separate objects together or flatten droplets. The squished shape of the droplet is the result of a balance between acoustic pressure trying to flatten the drop and surface tension, which tries to pull the drop into a sphere. If the acoustic field strength changes with a frequency that is a harmonic of the drop’s resonant frequency, the drop will oscillate in a star-like shape dependent on the harmonic. The video above demonstrates this for many harmonic frequencies. It also shows how alterations to the drop’s surface tension (by adding water at 2:19) can trigger the instability. Finally, if the field strength is increased even further, the drop’s behavior becomes chaotic as the acoustic pressure overwhelms surface tension’s ability to hold the drop together. Like all of this week’s videos, this video is a submission to the 2103 Gallery of Fluid Motion. (Video credit: W. Ran and S. Fredericks)

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    Lakes Upon Glaciers

    Supraglacial lakes–ephemeral bodies of water that form atop glaciers–can form and empty in a matter of hours. The lakes typically empty either by overflowing their banks or by discharging through a moulin, a well-like crevasse in the ice. When this happens, the water from the lake drains into the bed beneath the glacier, acting like a lubricant between the ice and the land and thus accelerating the glacier’s movement. The team in the video studied the draining of two different lakes, one which voided within 2 hours and the other slower one which drained over 45 hours. The faster of the two accelerated the glacier’s movement to a maximum of 1600 meters/year, far higher than its baseline velocity of 90-100 meters/year. For more see Laboratory Equipment and this post on ice flow. (Video credit: City College of New York)

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    Schlieren in Flight

    Schlieren photography is a common method of visualizing shock waves in wind tunnel experiments, but it’s much harder to pull off for aircraft in the sky. This video from NASA shows off some stunning work out of NASA Dryden capturing schlieren video of shock waves from a F-15B aircraft at Mach 1.38. You’ll notice that shock waves extend off the nose, wings, tail, and other parts of the airplane and extend well beyond the camera’s field of view. It’s these shock waves hitting the ground level that causes distinctive sonic booms. These tests are part of NASA’s on-going research into minimizing the effects of sonic boom so that civilian supersonic flight over land is feasible in the future. When the U.S. government shutdown ends, you’ll be able to learn more about this work at NASA Dryden’s GASPS page. (Video credit: NASA Dryden)

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    Droplet Collisions

    When droplets collide, there are three basic outcomes: they bounce off one another; they coalesce into one big drop; or they coalesce and then separate. Which outcome we observe depends on the relative importance of the droplets’ inertia compared to their surface tension. This is expressed through the dimensionless Weber number, made up of density, velocity, droplet diameter, and surface tension. For a low Weber number droplet, surface tension is still significant, so colliding droplets bounce off one another. At a moderate Weber number, the droplets coalesce. But when the fluid inertia is too high, as in the high Weber number example, the drops will coalesce but still have too much momentum and ultimately separate. (Video credit: G. Oldenziel)

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    How Air Dancers Dance

    Air dancers–those long fabric tubes with fans blowing into the bottom–are a popular way for shops to draw attention. They bend and flutter, shake and kink, all due to the interaction of airflow in and around them with the fabric. When the interior flow is smooth and laminar, the tube will stand upright, with very little motion. As the air inside transitions, some fluttering of the tube can be observed. Ultimately, it is when the air flow becomes turbulent that the cloth really dances. Variations in the flow are strong enough at this point that the tube will occasionally buckle. Behind this constriction, the flow pressure increases until its force is enough to overcome the weight of the tube and lift it once more. (Video credit: A. Varsano)

  • Dynamic Stall

    Dynamic Stall

    In nature, birds and other flying animals often use unsteady flow effects to enhance the lift their wings generate. When a wing sits at a high angle of attack, it stalls; the flow separates from the upper surface, and its lift force is suddenly lost. If, on the other hand, that wing is in motion and pitching upward, lift is maintained to a much higher angle of attack. The reason for this is shown in the flow visualization above. This montage shows a rectangular plate pitching upwards. Flow is left to right. Each row represents a specific angle of attack and each column shows a different spanwise location on the plate. As the plate pitches upward, a vortex forms and grows on the leading edge of the plate. Eventually, the leading-edge vortex separates, but not until a much higher angle of attack than the plate could sustain statically. This effect allows birds to maintain lift during perching maneuvers and is also key to helicopter rotor dynamics. (Image credit: K. Granlund et al.)

  • Fluids Round-up – 5 October 2013

    Fluids Round-up – 5 October 2013

    This is the last week that my IndieGoGo project is open for donations. All money above and beyond what is needed for the conference will go toward FYFD-produced videos. Also, donors can get some awesome FYFD stickers.

    As a reminder, those looking for more fluids–in video, textbook, or other form–can always check out my resources page. And if you know about great links that aren’t on there, let me know so that I can add them. On to the round-up!

    I had a lot of fun earlier this week giving a talk for the Texas A&M Applied Mathematics Undergraduate Seminar series. I didn’t get a chance to record it, but the slides are up here if anyone is interested.
    (Photo credit: M. Klimas)
  • Hydraulic Bumps

    Hydraulic Bumps

    If you’ve ever noticed the circular jump in your kitchen sink when you turn on the faucet, you’re familiar with what a jet does when it plunges into a horizontal layer of liquid. If the liquid is deep enough, the jet will perturb the surface into a circular depression, as in Figure (a) above. As the flow rate increases, a recirculating vortex ring and hydraulic bump forms (Figure b photo and flow schematic). At a critical flow rate, the bump will become unstable and form polygons instead of circles. At even larger flow rates, the system will shift toward a hydraulic jump, with a larger change in fluid elevation. Like bumps, these jumps can also appear in a variety of shapes. (Image credit: M. Labousse and J. W. M. Bush)

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    “Supermajor”

    In Matt Kenyon’s “Supermajor,” oil appears to flow upward against gravity from a puddle into a can. This optical illusion is a stroboscopic effect similar to the one that makes car wheels seem to rotate backwards. The human eye and brain can be tricked into seeing the stream of oil as being suspended or even moving backwards by changing the flicker of the lighting relative to the rate at which the drops fall. If you watch the videos carefully, the pedestal is vibrating, which imparts a specific frequency to the falling drops. Combine this with a light that flickers at a slightly different frequency than that of the vibration and you can make the stream of drops appear to move up or down. It’s a helpful way to trick the brain into freezing fluid motion we would normally be unable to appreciate without high-speed cameras. (Video credit: Science Gallery; exhibit credit: Matt Kenyon; submitted by jshoer)