Here laminar and turbulent flows, basic concepts in fluid mechanics, are demonstrated in the kitchen sink! While laminar flow is often desirable for decreasing drag due to friction, most practical flows are turbulent. The hissing the video author associates with the onset of turbulence is not a coincidence either. The chaotic motion of turbulent flows can produce aerodynamic noise like the roar produced by airplane propellers or the hum of electrical lines in the wind.
Tag: science

Water Spray from a Tire
The spray thrown up by a rolling tire is simulated in the lab by running a single-grooved tire (top) against a smooth tire (bottom) that simulates the road. A supply of water flows from the left at the speed of the rolling tires (6 m/s). The resultant sheet of water is a familiar site to motorists everywhere. Holes in the the sheet of water collide to form the smallest droplets, whose diameters are comparable to the thickness of the sheet, of the order of 100 microns. Thicker parts of the sheet form ligaments and break down into large droplets through the Plateau-Rayleigh instability. (Photo credit: Dennis Plocher, Fred Browand and Charles Radovich) #
Bill Nye Demos
[original media no longer available]
Have a little science enthusiasm from Bill Nye to brighten your Tuesday! This video includes demonstrations on thermodynamics (sucking the balloon into the flask), the Marangoni effect (driving the powder off the water surface and powering the glue boat by creating gradients in surface tension), and buoyancy (floating cans of cola).

