We saw previously how vibrating a falling stream of water and filming it with a matching camera frame rate appears to “freeze” the falling liquid. This video shows the same illusion, now with a 24 Hz sine wave, which the falling water mimics. Vibrating the speaker that drives the water stream slightly slower or slightly faster than the camera frame rate makes the water appear to slowly fall or rise relative to its “frozen” wave state. This is a beat effect caused by the slight difference in frequency between the water and the camera. (Video credit: brusspup; via BoingBoing; submitted by many readers)
Tag: vibration

Tuning Fork Fluids
This high-speed video shows a liquid crystal fluid vibrating on a tuning fork. As the surface moves, tiny jets shoot upward, sometimes with sufficient energy that the fluid column is stretched beyond surface tension’s ability to keep it intact, resulting in droplet ejection. The jets and surface waves create a mesmerizing pattern of fluid motion. (Video credit: J. Savage)

Hummingbirds Singing with their Tail Feathers
Aeroelastic flutter occurs when fluid mechanical forces and structural forces get coupled together, one feeding the other. Usually, we think of it as a destructive mechanism, but, for hummingbirds, it’s part of courtship. When a male hummingbird looks to attract a mate, he’ll climb and dive, flaring his tail feathers one or more times. As he does so, air flow over the feathers causes them to vibrate and produce noise. Researchers studied such tail feathers in a wind tunnel, finding a variety of vibrational behaviors, including a tendency for constructive interference–in other words two feathers vibrating in proximity is much louder than either individually. For more, check out the original Science article or the write-up at phys.org. (Video credit: C. Clark et al.)

Flapping Elastic Straws
One of the interesting challenges in fluid dynamics is the coupling of aerodynamic forces with structural forces. This could be the result of external flow, as with aeroelastic flutter on aircraft or architecture, or internal flow, as with the video above. Here researchers blow air through compliant cylindrical shells–think of a straw made of an elastic solid like latex–and observe the vibrations that result. Depending on the flow rate and material properties, different vibrational modes can be activated. The first mode behaves much like a garden hose that’s not being held; it vibrates wildly back-and-forth. The second mode wobbles the mouth of the shell open and closed, whereas the third mode forms three “flaps” that vibrate inward and outward. Each of these modes behaves very differently, and, for practical applications, it’s important for engineers to be able to predict, control, and account for these kinds of structural behaviors under aerodynamic loading. (Video credit: P. Zimoch et al.)

Bouncing in a Corral
About a year ago, we featured a video in which a fluid droplet bouncing on a vibrating pool demonstrated some aspects of the wave-particle duality fundamental to quantum mechanics. Work on this system continues and this new video focuses on studying some of the statistics of such a bouncing droplet–called a walker in the video–when it is confined to a circular corral. Using strobe lighting and capturing one frame per bounce, the vertical motion of these droplets is filtered out and the walking motion and the surface waves that guide it are captured. When the droplet is allowed to walk for an extended time, its path appears complicated and seemingly random, but it is possible to build a statistical picture and a probability density field that describe where the walker is most likely to be, much the way one describes the likelihood of locating a quantum particle. Parallels between the physical macroscale system and quantum-mechanical theory are drawn. (Video credit: D. Harris and J. Bush; submission by D. Harris)

Sandy Jets
When a fluid is vibrated, instabilities can form along its surface. With a sufficient amplitude, voids form inside the fluid and their collapse leads to a jet that shoots out from the fluid. A very different process leads to air cavities forming in a vibrated granular medium, but the jets produced are remarkably similar, as seen in this video. (Video credit: M. Sandtke et al.)

Grooving Bubbles
Here bubbles in a microchannel are subjected to an external ultrasonic acoustic field. Under the influence of this vibration, the bubbles self-organize into crystal-like structures with a fixed finite separation distance. Some bubbles cluster and contact. Some bubbles also pulsate in star-shaped vibration modes. When the external sound is turned off, the bubble crystal loses form and drifts apart. For more, see Rabaud et al. 2011. (Video credit: P. Marmottant et al.)

Dancing Droplet Clusters
When a fluid surface is vibrated, it’s possible to bounce a droplet indefinitely on the surface without the droplet coalescing into the pool. This is because each bounce of the droplet replenishes a thin layer of air that separates the droplet and the pool. If many droplets are added to the surface, as in the video above, a clustering behavior is observed, with many droplets gathering together. There is a limit, however, to the size of the cluster based on the amplitude of vibration. If vibrational amplitudes are pushed to the point of creating Faraday waves–standing waves on the surface of the pool–then large clusters of droplets can be suspended and sustained. (Video credit: P. Cabrera-Garcia and R. Zenit; via io9; submitted by oneheadtoanother)

“Ferienne”
In “Ferienne” artist Afiq Omar utilizes ferrofluids, magnetism, and vibration to create analog visual effects. Most of the dot and labyrinthine patterns result from the reaction of a ferrofluid submerged in a nonmagnetic fluid to an external magnetic field. Diffusion effects and surface tension instabilities are also visible in the way the darker ferrofluid breaks down in the carrier fluid. Also be sure to check out Omar’s previously featured fluid film “Ferroux”. (Video credit: Afiq Omar)

Acoustic Levitation
Researchers at Argonne National Laboratory are using acoustic levitation of droplets to further pharmaceuticals. By placing two precisely aligned speakers opposite one another, a standing wave can be created. At nodes along the standing wave, there is no net transfer of energy, but the acoustic pressure is sufficient to cancel the effect of gravity, allowing light objects like droplets to levitate. This is why, in the video, you see the droplets are placed at equally spaced distances and if one is slightly off the node, it vibrates noticeably. The benefit of this levitation to pharmaceutical research comes at the molecular level; drugs formed from solutions kept in a solid container are likely to be crystalline in structure and thus less efficiently absorbed by the body. If the drug can instead be kept in an amorphous state by evaporating the solution without a container, then the resulting drug may be effective at a lower dosage than its crystalline counterpart. (Video credit: Argonne National Laboratory, via Laughing Squid, submitted by @__pj)
