The patterns formed when vibrating a liquid on a speaker cone are standing waves known as Faraday waves. With a large enough amplitude, this produces some very cool effects with a shear-thickening non-Newtonian fluid like oobleck. (It would actually be interesting to see what happens when you vibrate a shear-thinning liquid like shampoo…) This video also details how you can set up this demonstration yourself at home.
Videos

Godspeed, Discovery!
The space shuttle, despite three decades of service, remains a triumph of engineering. Although it is nominally a space vehicle, fluid dynamics are vital throughout its operation. From the combustion in the engine to the overexpansion of the exhaust gases; from the turbulent plume of the shuttle’s wake to the life support and waste management systems on orbit, fluid mechanics cannot be escaped. Countless simulations and experiments have helped determine the forces, temperatures, and flight profiles for the vehicle during ascent and re-entry. Experiments have flown as payloads and hundreds of astronauts have “performed experiments in fluid mechanics” in microgravity. Since STS-114, flow transition experiments have even been mounted on the orbiter wing. The effort and love put into making these machines fly is staggering, but all things end. Godspeed to Discovery and her crew on this, her final mission!

Swimming Sandfish Lizards
Sandfish lizards can “swim” through granular flows like sand using an undulating, sinusoidal motion. Having studied this motion, engineers have built a robot that swims similarly through large glass beads and have now created a numerical simulation of the physics that matches the measured forces on the swimmer to within 8%. This type of flow is, in some respects, tougher than actual fluids because individual particles have to followed, while in most of fluid mechanics, we can use the continuum assumption to treat a liquid or gas as a continuous medium. #

Dancing Droplets
When a droplet falls onto a larger pool of the same liquid, it briefly sits on a layer of air that prevents coalescence. When that air drains away, the coalescence cascade–in which the droplet breaks into progressively smaller droplets until fully absorbed–begins. But if you vibrate the pool of liquid, the droplet bounces, effectively injecting more air between it and the pool. This prevents coalescence. What’s really neat here is that the researchers demonstrate this effect with arrays of droplets dancing in formation.

Shock Waves
Flow visualization really can be considered a form of art. Though we fluid mechanicians are looking for physics, we’re quite aware of the beauty of what we study. The clips in this video mostly show transient shockwave behavior, including lots of shock reflection and even a few instabilities. It’s unclear what the speeds are, aside from faster than sound; the medium is air.

How Ferrofluids Work
Here’s a ferrofluid video with a little more explanation about how ferrofluids work. Surfactants prevent the tiny magnetic particles suspended in the fluid from separating out when exposed to a magnetic field.

Geometrical Droplet Splashes
Sadly, this video shows no droplet impacts on a heart-shaped post, but maybe you can imagine what it would look like after seeing other geometrical shapes. Happy Valentine’s Day, guys!

High-Speed Leidenfrost Levitation
The Leidenfrost effect occurs when a liquid encounters a surface with a temperature much higher than its boiling point. Some of the liquid is instantly vaporized and then a droplet will skate across the surface on that vapor. This video shows the process at 3000 frames per second.

The Pistol Shrimp’s Secret Weapon
The pistol shrimp (or pistol crab) is a finger-sized crustacean with a fluid dynamical superpower. When it snaps its claw, a jet of water shoots out so quickly (62 mph) that a low-pressure bubble forms in its wake. When the bubble collapses, it emits a bang and a flash of light in a process known as sonoluminescence. The whole event takes less than 300 microseconds. The light emitted suggests that temperatures inside the bubble reach 5,000 degrees Kelvin, around the temperature of the surface of the sun. #

Reader Question: National Committee for Fluid Mechanics Films
lazenby asks: Have you seen these guys? http://web.mit.edu/hml/ncfmf.html
Yes, absolutely! Those videos, which date from the 1960s, are so useful that they’re still shown to undergraduates today. (Or at least they showed several of them to us when I was junior!) They can seem a bit slow by current standards, but the films are full of great demonstrations of basic fluid mechanics. If the links on that page don’t work (or, if like me, you can’t stream RealPlayer), a lot of the videos can also be found on YouTube by searching for individual titles. The Low Reynolds Number Flow video is one of my favorites because it’s hosted by G. I. Taylor, one of the the most prolific and influential fluid mechanicians of the 20th century.

