It’s fascinating to sit on the beach and watch the waves roll in and break, but rarely do we get a view like the one in this video. Here researchers have created a breaking wave in a wave tank and recorded the wave as it travels the length of the tank with a high-speed camera moving at the same speed as the wave crest. This perspective, moving alongside the fluid, is a Lagrangian coordinate system; if one instead stood still and watched the wave roll past, it would be an Eulerian measurement. Traveling with the wave, we can see how a lip forms on the wave crest, then rolls down, capturing a tube of air. As water begins to flow over the lip, perturbations grow, causing ripples in the laminar curtain. Then the water strikes the main wave and rebounds turbulently, creating a familiar white cap. In the second half of the video, the process is shown from above, highlighting the entrainment of air and the creation of the bubbles that form the white cap of a breaking wave. (Video credit: R. Liu et al)
Videos

Peering Inside the Kettle
Here natural convection is explored experimentally in a quasi-2D environment. The researchers demonstrate how this phenomenon, which is much like that seen in a boiling pot, can be investigated by measuring the refractive distortions caused by the thin heated fluid layer. They also demonstrate types of boiling that can occur. Typically, bubbles nucleate at the heated surface and then rise to pull hot fluid with them. At high enough temperatures above the liquid’s boiling point, however, an unstable layer of vapor can form over the heated surface. This “boiling crisis” or critical heat flux produces a marked reduction in heat transfer due to the insulation provided by the vapor layer. (Video credit: S. Wildeman et al.)

Cavitation in a Bottle
Sudden changes in the pressure or temperature in a liquid can create bubbles in a process known as cavitation. Underwater explosions are just one of the ways to induce cavitation in a liquid. As identified in the above video, the shock waves traveling through the liquid force a change in pressure that creates bubbles. When these bubbles collapse, the container is subjected to an enormous oscillation in pressure, which often results in damage. The same phenomenon is responsible for damage on boat propellers as well as this beer bottle smashing trick. Check out these other high-speed videos of cavitation in a bottle: (Video credit: Destin/Smarter Every Day; submitted by Juan S.)

Air Entrainment
When a liquid jet falls into a pool, air is often entrained along with the liquid, creating a cavity and, often, bubbles. Shown above is video of a low-speed laminar jet entering a quiescent pool. The jet appears to entrain a thin film of gas, which then breaks up in a three-dimensional fashion, despite the symmetry of the incoming jet. As the speed of the incoming jet is increased and turbulence is introduced, the resulting air entrainment becomes violent and chaotic. For additional information and videos, see Kiger and Duncan 2012 and their supplemental videos. (Video credit: K. Kiger and J. Duncan)

Relighting a Candle
When a candle is blown out, a buoyant plume of unburned fuel/air mixture continues to rise for several seconds. By bringing a combustion source close to the plume, the mixture can ignite and flames will propagate back down to the candle wick to reignite it. Watch the slow motion replay near the end of the video and you can actually see the flame front propagate downward. (Video credit: G. Casavan, University of Colorado)

Leidenfrost Dynamics
When a liquid impacts a solid heated well above the liquid’s boiling point, droplets can form, levitating on a thin film of vapor that helps insulate them from the heat of the solid. This is known as the Leidenfrost effect. Here a very large Leidenfrost droplet is shown from the side in high-speed. A vapor chimney forms beneath the drop, causing the dome in the liquid. When the dome bursts, the droplet momentarily forms a torus before closing. The resulting oscillatory waves in the droplet are spectacular. The same behavior can be viewed from above in this video. (Video credit: D. Soto and R. Thevenin; from an upcoming review by D. Quere)

“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)

Unsteady Rocket Nozzle
This numerical simulation gives a glimpse of flow inside an unsteady rocket nozzle. The nozzle is over-expanded, meaning that the exhaust’s pressure is lower than that of the ambient atmosphere. A slightly over-expanded nozzle causes little more than a decrease in efficiency, but if the nozzle is grossly over-expanded, the boundary layer along the nozzle wall can separate and induce major instabilities, as seen here. In the first segment of the video, turbulent structures along the nozzle wall boundary layer are shown; note how the boundary layer becomes very thick and turbulent after the primary shock wave (shown in gray). This is due to the flow separating near the wall. The second half of the video shows the unsteadiness this can create. The primary shock wave splits into two near the wall, creating a lambda shock wave, named for the shape of the lower case Greek letter. This shock structure is indicative of strong interaction between the boundary layer and shock wave. (Video credit: B. Olson and S. Lele)

Microgravity Water Balloons
When a water balloon pops in microgravity, waves propagate from the initial point of contact and the final point of contact (where the balloon skin peels away). As these waves come inward toward one another, the water is compressed from its original potato-like shape into a pancake-like one. In most cases, surface tension will provide a damping force on this oscillatory motion, eventually making the water into a sphere. On Earth, in contrast, a water balloon seems to hold its shape after popping. This is because the effect of gravity on the water is much larger than the effect of the propagating waves. This is one reason that it is useful to have a laboratory in space! Without a microgravity environment, it is much harder to study and observe secondary and tertiary-order forces on a physical event. (Video credit: Don Pettit, Science Off The Sphere)

Magnus Force
Physics students are often taught to ignore the effects of air on a projectile, but such effects are not always negligible. This video features several great examples of the Magnus effect, which occurs when a spinning object moves through a fluid. The Magnus force acts perpendicular to the spin axis and is generated by pressure imbalances in the fluid near the object’s surface. On one side of the spinning object, fluid is dragged with the spin, staying attached to the object for longer than if it weren’t spinning. On the other side, however, the fluid is quickly stopped by the spin acting in the direction opposite to the fluid motion. The pressure will be higher on the side where the fluid stagnates and lower on the side where the flow stays attached, thereby generating a force acting from high-to-low, just like with lift on an airfoil. Sports players use this effect all the time: pitchers throw curveballs, volleyball and tennis players use topspin to drive a ball downward past the net, and golfers use backspin to keep a golf ball flying farther. (Video credit: Veritasium)
