Tag: Urination

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    Pee-Flinging Sharpshooters

    The tiny glassy-winged sharpshooter feeds exclusively on nutrient-poor sap from plant xylem. Since the sap is 95% water, the insects have to consume massive amounts, necessitating lots of urination — up to 300 times their body weight each day! With so much urine to get rid of and so little energy to spare, the sharpshooter has developed an ingenious, low-energy method to expel its waste. The insect forms a droplet on its anal stylus and flings it. A recent study reveals just how clever the insect’s method is.

    Researchers found that sharpshooters fling their droplets 40% faster than their stylus moves. This superpropulsion is only possible because the stylus’s motion is finely tuned to the droplet’s elasticity. Essentially, the insects achieve single-shot resonance with every throw. The energy-savings for the insects is substantial; researchers estimate that making a jet of urine instead would cost four to eight more times energy. (Video credit: Georgia Tech; image and research credit: E. Challita et al.; via Ars Technica; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)

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    The Law of Urination

    Tonight is the 26th Ig Nobel Prize ceremony. As I’ve covered previously, the subject of fluid dynamics has been quite successful at winning these awards designed to “make people LAUGH, then THINK,” and last year’s ceremony was no exception. Georgia Tech researchers won the Physics Prize last year for explaining why mammals of very different sizes all urinate for roughly 21 seconds.

    Urination is a gravity-driven process, and larger animals have longer urethras, which means that gravity will have more time to accelerate fluid flowing from the the bladder to, well, the exit. Thus, larger animals will have higher flow rates. This allows them to empty their bigger bladders in essentially the same amount of time as a smaller animal. Recognizing this pattern can be helpful to both veterinarians diagnosing problems in animals and to engineers designing systems to move fluids efficiently.

    There’s no way to know whether fluid dynamics will win another Ig Nobel Prize tonight, but I can guarantee that subject will come up. I’ll be giving a 24/7 lecture on Fluid Dynamics during tonight’s Ig Nobel Prize ceremony.  You can see me – and find out this year’s winners – by watching the ceremony webcast here starting at 5:40pm EDT. (Video credit: DNews; research credit: P. Yang et al.)

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    Avoiding Splashback

    Here’s a likely Ig Nobel Prize candidate from the BYU SplashLab: a study of splashing caused by a stream of fluid entering a horizontal body of water or hitting a solid vertical surface. In other words, urinal dynamics. The researchers simulated this activity using a stream of water released from a given height and angle and observed the resulting splash with high-speed video. They found a stream falls only 15-20 centimeters before the Plateau-Rayleigh instability breaks it into a series of droplets, and that this is the worst-case scenario for splash-back. The video above shows how a stream of droplets hits the pool, creating a complex cavity driven deeper with each droplet impact. Not only does each impact create a splash, the cavity’s collapse does as well. Similarly, when it comes to solid surfaces, they found that a continuous stream splashes less. They’ve also put together a helpful primer on the best ways to avoid splash-back. (Video credit: R. Hurd and T. Truscott; submitted by Ian N., bewuethr, John C. and possibly others)

    For readers attending the APS DFD meeting, you can catch their talk, “Urinal Dynamics,” Sunday afternoon in Session E9 before you come to E18 for my FYFD talk.