Soil liquefaction is a rather unsettling process in which apparently solid ground begins moving in a fluid-like way after agitation. It occurs in loose sediments when the spaces between individual particles become nearly saturated with water. This can happen, for example, after heavy rains or in a place with inadequate drainage. Such cases are typically very localized, though, and require some significant agitation of the surface, like pressing with heavy machinery or jumping in a single spot. Soil liquefaction becomes a greater danger, however, in an earthquake. Even in a dry area, the earth’s shaking can force groundwater up into the surface sediment and vibrate the soil sufficiently to liquify it, causing whole buildings to sink or tip and wreaking havoc on manmade infrastructure. (Video credit: jokulhlaups)
Tag: vibration

Hydrodynamic Quantum Analogs
Over the past few years, researchers have been exploring the dynamics of droplets bouncing on a vibrating fluid. These systems display many behaviors associated with quantum mechanics, including wave-particle duality, single-slit and double-slit diffraction, and tunneling. A new paper examines the system mathematically, showing that the droplets obey many of the same mathematics as quantum systems. In fact, the droplet-wave system behaves as a macroscopic analog of 2D quantum behaviors. The implications are intriguing, especially for teaching. Now students of quantum mechanics can experiment with a simple apparatus to understand some of the non-intuitive aspects of quantum behavior. For more, see the paper on arxiv. (Image credit: D. Harris and J. Bush; research credit: R. Brady and R. Anderson)

Vibrating Paint
Paint is probably the Internet’s second favorite non-Newtonian fluid to vibrate on a speaker–after oobleck, of course. And the Slow Mo Guys’ take on it does not disappoint: it’s bursting (literally?) with great fluid dynamics. It all starts at 1:53 when the less dense green paint starts dimpling due to the Faraday instability. Notice how the dimples and jets of fluid are all roughly equally spaced. When the vibration surpasses the green paint’s critical amplitude, jets sprout all over, ejecting droplets as they bounce. At 3:15, watch as a tiny yellow jet collapses into a cavity before the cavity’s collapse and the vibration combine to propel a jet much further outward. The macro shots are brilliant as well; watch for ligaments of paint breaking into droplets due to the surface-tension-driven Plateau-Rayleigh instability. (Video credit: The Slow Mo Guys)

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)

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!
- Popular Science has look at what it was like to fly on the Concorde, the only supersonic commercial airliner ever flown.
- For the cyclists and CFD folks out there, Zipp has put out a new video discussing their Firecrest wheels’ aerodynamics.
- io9 explains how superhydrophobic surfaces impart a charge to water droplets and how this can be used to increase efficiency at power plants.
- BuzzFeed UK has 32 fun science GIFs, several of which are fluids-related, and several of which will look familiar to long-time readers. (via Flow Visualization on FB)
- Wired has an intriguing short on Acoustic Archives, a group that focuses on capturing the acoustic qualities of historic locations using custom-designed 3D microphones.
- Congratulations to Richard over at Flow Viz for hitting his 100th post! Here’s to many more.
- Finally, our lead image comes from Martin Klimas. Smithsonian’s blog has a feature on his work in which he transforms songs from artists like Pink Floyd, Daft Punk, and Bach into sonic sculptures using paint on speakers. (via Flow Visualization on FB)
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)
“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)

Bouncing Atop a Pool
When slowed down, everyday occurrences, like a drop of water falling into a pool, can look absolutely extraordinary. When a falling drop has low momentum, it doesn’t simply disappear into the puddle. It sits on the surface, separated from the main pool by a very thin layer of air. Given time, the air drains away and the droplet cascades its way into the pool via smaller and smaller droplets. By vibrating the surface, the droplet bounces, with each bounce refreshing the layer of air that separates it from the main pool. Minute Lab’s video does a great job of explaining the process from beginning to end, accompanied with wonderful video of each step in action. For even more mind-boggling, check out how these bouncing droplets can demonstrate quantum mechanical behaviors. (Video credit: Minute Laboratory; submitted by Pascal)

Fluids Round-up – 21 September 2013
First off, I’d like to give a special shout-out to FYFD’s friends at Pointwise, who were kind enough to invite me for a visit this week. For any readers looking for CFD grid-generation software, check them out; they are a fantastic bunch and very good at what they do.
My thanks again to everyone who donated this week to help get me to the APS conference. The campaign is still open if anyone wants to get in on the FYFD wallpapers and stickers on offer to donors. As a reminder, any funds beyond conference costs will go toward improving FYFD, including getting equipment to make FYFD videos. On to the fluids round-up!
- Wired takes us behind the scenes of the creation of Games of Thrones’ dragons. Believe it or not, the VFX team actually did digital simulations of the dragons flying in a wind tunnel.
- Nature dissects whether a submarine at relativistic speeds sinks or floats. (via io9) Note that Nature article says the submarine is in water but the original paper simply says that the submarine is immersed in a fluid and makes no account for the compressibility (or lack thereof) of that fluid.
- Add some excitement to your day with liquid-nitrogen-induced explosions from Distort (via io9).
- Flow Viz shows off a great picture of condensation-induced flow visualization on an airplane wing.
- Check out this awesome video of vibrating lycopodium powder from Susi Sie. (via io9)
- National Geographic considers whether Hawaii’s molasses spill is more or less environmentally damaging than an oil spill.
- Finally, our lead image shows a natural visualization of flow around a kayaker. The foam atop the water forms when air and water mix with the gas produced by decomposing leaves. The photo by Lucas Gilman appeared in Outside Magazine earlier this summer. (via Flow Visualization)
(Photo credit: L. Gilman)

Vibrating Droplets
When still, water drops sitting on a surface are roughly hemispherical, drawn into that shape by surface tension. But on a vibrating surface, the same water drop displays many different shapes, like those in the video above. Researchers have observed more than 30 different mode shapes by varying the driving frequency. The metal mesh placed beneath the glass on which the drops sit helps the researchers determine the drop’s shape. As the drop deforms, the mesh appears to distort due to the refraction of light through the changing shape of the drop’s water-air interface. The distortion allows observers to visualize (and in some experiments even reconstruct) the shape of the drop’s surface. Understanding this kind of droplet behavior is valuable for many applications, including ink-jet printing and microfluidic devices. (Video credit: C. Chang et al.; via Science)

Granular Gases
Vibrating particles or granular materials can produce many fluid-like behaviors. In this video, researchers demonstrate how a granular gas made up of particles of two sizes behaves at different conditions. By tweaking the amplitude of the vibration, they alter how the particles cluster in a divided container. At large vibrational amplitudes, the particles behave much like a gas–energetic and spread out. At lower amplitudes, though, the particle density and the number of particle collisions increases. Each collision dissipates some of a particle’s energy; more collisions means less energy available to escape. As a result, the particles cluster, forming an attractor that draws in additional particles over time. (Video credit: R. Mikkelson et al.)



