Videos

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    “Compressed 02”

    This timelapse video shows the spreading of food coloring and a ferrofluid through soap suds surrounding a magnet. Capillary action, the same force that enables sap to flow up through a tree against gravity, helps draw the fluids through the interfaces between the soap bubbles without disturbing the suds. The magnet’s field provides a preferred direction for the ferrofluid flow. (via Gizmodo)

  • Aircraft Contrails

    [original media no longer available]

    Under the right atmospheric conditions, condensation can form, even at low speeds, as moist air is accelerated over airplane wings. This acceleration causes a local drop in pressure and temperature, which can cause water vapor in the air to condense. The condensation can sometimes get pulled into the wingtip vortices shed off of the wings, tail, and ailerons of an aircraft, as in the video above, making the aerodynamics of the airplane visible to the naked eye.

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    The Barus Effect

    Non-Newtonian fluids are full of all kinds of unusual behaviors. Here a highly viscoelastic non-Newtonian fluid exhibits the Barus effect, in which extruding the fluid causes the falling jet to swell to several times larger than the diameter of the opening through which it was extruded. This is caused by the stretching and relaxation of polymers in the fluid as it passes through the opening.

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    Sound and Harmonics

    The vibrations we perceive as sound, whether in air, water, or any other fluid, are tiny pressure waves emanating from a source, transmitting like ripples across a pond, and finally being caught by our ears and translated by our brains. In this video, the mechanisms and mathematics of sound and harmonics are explained. Although we’re most familiar with these concepts in acoustics, the same principles are used when studying other oscillatory motions, including pendulums, mass-spring systems, disturbances in boundary layers, and the vibrations of a diving board. All of these things rely on the same fundamental principles and mathematics.

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    Simulating Turbulence

    Turbulent flows are complicated to simulate because of their many scales. The largest eddies in a flow, where energy is generated, can be of the order of meters, while the smallest scales, where energy is dissipated, are of the order of fractions of a millimeter. In Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS), the exact equations governing the flow are solved at all of those scales for every time step–requiring hundreds or thousands of computational hours on supercomputers to solve even a small domain’s worth of flow, as on the airplane wing in the video. Large Eddy Simulation (LES) is another technique that is less computationally expensive; it calculates the larger scales exactly and models the smaller ones. The video shows just how complicated the flow field can look. The red-orange curls seen in much of the flow are hairpin vortices, named for their shape, and commonly found in turbulent boundary layers.

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    How Coffee Rings Form

    Coffee rings (an ubiquitous feature of academia) are formed by the deposition of particles as the liquid evaporates. When a coffee drop evaporates, capillary action draws the coffee particles toward the edges of the drop, where they congregate into a ring. Research now suggests that this is due to the spherical nature of the particles. Ellipsoidal particles, in contrast, clump together and result in a uniform stain once their carrier liquid evaporates. The effect seems to be due to the particles’ effects on surface tension; the ellipsoidal particles deform the surface of the droplet as it evaporates such that they are not pulled to the edges. Adding a surfactant, like soap, that decreases surface tension caused the ellipsoidal particles to form rings just as the spherical particles do. (submitted by Neil K) #

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    The Dance of Jets and Droplets

    Placing a prism upside down in a bath of silicone oil creates a trapped bubble of air inside the prism. When oscillated above a critical amplitude, the corners of the prism, the oil, and the air perform an intricate dance of bubbles, singularities, jets, and droplets. Read more in the research paper. #

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    The Spinning Underwater Vortex

    Vortex rings are a topic we’ve covered before with dolphins, whales, humans, volcanoes and even moss, but this video is particularly fun thanks to the addition of a bottle cap. By sticking the bottle cap next to the ring, these swimmers are able to demonstrate the forceful spinning of the fluid near the vortex. This spinning is what helps the vortex hold its shape over distances much larger than its diameter. As you can also see, though, sticking a bottle cap in the ring causes it to break up faster than it would otherwise! (submitted by Kris S)

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    Glorious Coronal Mass Ejection

    In early June, NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory recorded a stunning coronal mass ejection, in which larger than usual quantities of cool (relatively speaking) plasma erupted from the surface of the sun and rained back down along magnetic field lines. Plasma is an ionized gas-like state of matter subject to the same laws that govern more familiar fluids like water or air, with the additional caveat that, being electrically conductive, plasmas also obey Maxwell’s equations. #

  • Computational Shock Compression

    [original media no longer available]

    Computational modeling can help verify and visualize experimental results, as in this video of supersonic flow. Oak Ridge National Laboratory produced the work as part of a project using shock compression and turbines to capture carbon dioxide gas. Shock waves and velocity profiles are shown throughout the computational field, and velocity isosurfaces paint a telling portrait of the complicated flow pattern. Wired Science features other award-winning simulation videos, many of which also feature fluid dynamics. #