#fluidsAsArt

2025-05-02

“Legend”

Filmmaker Roman De Giuli returns to his roots with this short fluid-filled film inspired by the color gold. He combines paint, ink, powders, and particles in a mix of micro- and macroscale photography. As always, the results are a mesmerizing plethora of fluid phenomena: Marangoni flows, turbulence, vorticity, viscous fingering and so much more. (Video and image credit: R. De Giuli)

#fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #instability #physics #science #surfaceTension #turbulence

2025-04-25

Ghostly Waterfalls

Photographer Jonathan Knight likes capturing waterfalls about 45 minutes after sunset, creating ghostly images that emphasize the shape of the cascading water. The dim surroundings and misty shapes remind me of old daguerreotypes. See more of his images on his website and his Instagram. (Image credit: J. Knight; via Colossal)

#fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #physics #science #waterfalls

“Waterfall VI,” Nellie Creek, CO
2025-04-23

Drops on the Edge

Drops impacting a dry hydrophilic surface flatten into a film. Drops that impact a wet film throw up a crown-shaped splash. But what happens when a drop hits the edge of a wet surface? That’s the situation explored in this video, where blue-dyed drops interact with a red-dyed film. From every angle, the impact is complex — sending up partial crown splashes, generating capillary waves that shift the contact line, and chaotically mixing the drop and film’s liquids. (Video and image credit: A. Sauret et al.)

#2024gofm #crownSplash #dropletImpact #droplets #flowVisualization #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #physics #science #wetting

2025-04-18

“Dispersion”

In “Dispersion,” particles spread under the influence of an unseen fluid. Like Roman de Giuli’s work, filmmaker Susi Sie creates macro images that look like ice floes, deserts, and river deltas viewed from above. This similarity of patterns at both large and small scales is a specialty of fluid physics. Just as artists use it to mimic larger flows, scientists use it to study planet-scale problems in the lab. (Video and image credit: S. Sie et al.)

#dispersion #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #granularFlow #granularMaterial #particulates #physics #reynoldsSimilarity #science

2025-04-11

Arctic Melt

Temperatures in the Arctic are rising faster than elsewhere, triggering more and more melting. Photographer Scott Portelli captured a melting ice shelf protruding into the ocean in this aerial image. Across the top of the frozen landscape, streams and rivers cut through the ice, leading to waterfalls that flood the nearby ocean with freshwater. This meltwater will do more than raise ocean levels; it changes temperature and salinity in these regions, disrupting the convection that keeps our planet healthy. (Image credit: S. Portelli/OPOTY; via Colossal)

#climateChange #convection #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #geophysics #melting #physics #science

A melting ice shelf in the Arctic showers freshwater into the ocean.
2025-04-04

Reclaiming the Land

Lava floods human-made infrastructure on Iceland’s Reykjanes peninsula in this aerial image from photographer Ael Kermarec. Protecting roads and buildings from lava flows is a formidable challenge, but it’s one that researchers are tackling. But the larger and faster the lava flow, the harder infrastructure is to protect. Sometimes our best efforts are simply overwhelmed by nature’s power. (Image credit: A. Kermarec/WNPA; via Colossal)

#fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #geophysics #gravityCurrent #lava #physics #science #viscousFlow

Aerial view of lava overflowing a road and the surrounding landscape in Iceland.
2025-03-28

“Visions in Ice”

The glittering blue interior of an ice cave sparkles in this award-winning image by photographer Yasmin Namini. The cave is underneath Iceland’s Vatnajokull Glacier. Notice the deep scallops carved into the lower wall. This shape is common in melting and dissolution processes. It is unavoidable for flat surfaces exposed to a melting/dissolving flow. (Image credit: Y. Namini/WNPA; via Colossal)

#erosion #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #geology #geophysics #glacier #ice #instability #melting #physics #science

The interior of an ice cave under the Vatnajokull Glacier in South Iceland.
2025-03-26

A Stellar Look at NGC 602

The young star cluster NGC 602 sits some 200,000 light years away in the Small Magellanic Cloud. Seen here in near- and mid-infrared, the cluster is a glowing cradle of star forming conditions similar to the early universe. A large nebula, made up of multicolored dust and gas, surrounds the star cluster. Its dusty finger-like pillars could be an example of Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities or plumes shaped by energetic stellar jets. (Image credit: NASA/ESA/CSA/JWST; via Colossal)

#astronomy #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #instability #nebula #physics #science #stellarEvolution

The star cluster NGC 602, as seen by instruments on the JWST.
2025-03-21

“The Ballet of Colors”

Thomas Blanchard’s short film “The Ballet of Colors” plunges viewers into a warm spectrum of roiling oil and paint. Fluid dynamically speaking, it could be subtitled “the Plateau-Rayleigh instability” thanks to its focus on retracting paint ruptures and ligaments breaking into droplets. Unlike some other videos of this genre, Blanchard uses a high-speed camera here, filming the action at 1,000 frames per second, and the result is smooth, crisply focused, and absolutely delectable. (Video and image credit: T. Blanchard et al.)

#droplets #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #instability #physics #PlateauRayleighInstability #science

2025-03-14

“Skimming the Waves”

Common terns are gregarious sea birds that cruise low over the water to fish. When they spot prey, they will dip down to grab a fish from the surface, or they will fold their wings to plunge-dive to depths of half a meter. Compared to gannets and boobies, these are slower, shallower dives that involve less impact risk. Presumably the birds’ choice of dive height reflects the typical swim depth of their preferred fish. (Image credit: N. Kovo/WPOTY; via Colossal)

#biology #birds #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #physics #plungeDiving #science

Photo by Nate Kovo.
2025-03-12

Strandbeest Evolution

Theo Jansen’s Strandbeests are massive, wind-powered kinetic sculptures designed to roam Dutch beaches. Conceived in the late 1980s as a way to kick up sand that would replenish nearby dunes, the beests have grown into a decades-long obsession for the artist and his followers. This Veritasium video charts the development and evolution of the Strandbeest from its original concept through Jansen’s increasingly self-sufficient versions. I found the leg linkage of the Strandbeest especially fascinating. How neat to find a relatively simply proportion of linkages capable of turning a small crank’s motion into a stable walking gait. Anyone else feel like building a miniature Strandbeest now? (Video and image credit: Veritasium)

#erosion #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #physics #science #windEnergy

2025-02-28

“Trinity”

Inspired by the film Oppenheimer, artist Thomas Blanchard created “Trinity,” a short film imagining a nuclear explosion with macro-scale fluid motion. There’s clever video editing and compositing in this video, but no CGI. Instead, Blanchard filmed fire, sparklers, alcohol inks, pigments and more up close and in stunning detail. As always, his work is a reminder of the amazing possibilities of analog-based art. (Video and image credit: T. Blanchard)

#droplets #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #marangoniEffect #physics #science #turbulence

2025-02-21

“One”

A 4-minute, unedited one-shot video of colorful paint sliding down a sheet? Yes, please.

Beautiful visuals aside, there are some really interesting physics involved here. It’s unclear whether the there’s any change in the speed at which paint gets deposited at the top of the incline over the course of the video, yet we see huge changes in the visual patterns. This happens, in part, because the layer of paint is getting thicker and heavier over time, changing the dynamics of its slide under gravity. There may even be some shear-thinning going on, given that paint is usually non-Newtonian. I can imagine some connections to landslides, avalanches, and other gravity currents with non-Newtonian fluids. (Video and image credit: R. De Giuli)

#fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #gravityCurrent #nonNewtonianFluids #physics #science #shearThinning

2025-02-14

“My Own Galaxy”

Fungal spores sketch out minute air currents in this shortlisted photograph by Avilash Ghosh. The moth atop a mushroom appears to admire the celestial view. In the largely still air near the forest floor, mushrooms use evaporation and buoyancy to generate air flows capable of lifting their spores high enough to catch a stray breeze. (Image credit: A. Ghosh/CUPOTY; via Colossal)

#biology #buoyancy #evaporation #flowVisualization #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #moths #mushrooms #physics #science

Photo by Avilash Ghosh.
2025-02-07

“Lively”

In “Lively,” filmmaker Christopher Dormoy zooms in on ice. He shows ice forming and melting, capturing bubbles and their trails, as well as the subtle flows that go on in and around the ice. By introducing blue dye, he highlights some of the internal flows we would otherwise miss. (Video and image credit: C. Dormoy)

#flowVisualization #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #freezing #ice #iceFormation #melting #physics #science

2025-01-31

“Waterfall Wonder”

The Semeru volcano rises in the background of this photo of Java’s Tumpak Sewa waterfall by Joan de la Malla. Rain that falls on the volcano slides down its flank and wanders through the jungle on its way to the spectacular 120-meter-high waterfall. From the clouds wreathing the mountain through the jungle’s drifting fogs to the mists of the falls, this portrait highlights the many forms water takes on its journey. (Image credit: J. de la Malla/WPOTY; via Colossal)

#fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #physics #science #waterfalls

Photo by Joan de la Malla.
2025-01-29

Instabilities in Competition

When two liquid jets collide, they form a thin liquid sheet with a thicker rim. That rim breaks into threads and then droplets, forming a well-known fishbone pattern as the Plateau-Rayleigh instability breaks up the flow. This poster shows a twist on that set-up: here, the two colliding jets vary slightly in their velocities. That variability adds a second instability to the system, visible as the wavy pattern on the central liquid sheet. The sheet’s rim still breaks apart in the usual fishbone pattern, but the growing waves in the center of the sheet eventually that structure apart as well. (Image credit: S. Dighe et al.)

#2024gofm #fishbone #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #instability #jetCollision #physics #PlateauRayleighInstability #science

A research poster showing two colliding liquid jets.
2025-01-24

Bubbling Up

By volume, Lake Baikal is the world’s largest lake, holding over 20% of the planet’s fresh water. It’s also a major carbon sink, holding large amounts of methane. That’s the gas trapped in the frozen bubbles seen here. Baikal’s ice is exceptionally clear, making long trails of frozen bubbles visible during the winter. (Image credit: K. Makeeva; via APOD)

#bubble #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #ice #physics #science

Bubbles of methane frozen under the surface of Lake Baikal.
2025-01-17

Within a Drop

In this macro video, various chemical reactions swirl inside a single dangling droplet. Despite its tiny size, quite a lot can go on in a drop like this. Both the injection of chemicals and the chemical reactions themselves can cause the flows we see here. Surface tension variations and capillary waves on the exterior of the drop can play a role, too. Just because a flow is tiny doesn’t mean it’s simple. (Video and image credit: B. Pleyer; via Nikon Small World in Motion)

Chemical reactions swirl within a single, hanging droplet.

#chemistry #droplets #flowVisualization #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #marangoniEffect #physics #science #surfaceTension

2025-01-10

Strata of Starlings

Starlings come together in groups of up to thousands of birds for the protection of numbers. These flocks form spellbinding, undulating masses known as murmurations, where the movement of individual starlings sends waves spreading from neighbor to neighbor through the group. One bird’s effort to dodge a hawk triggers a giant, spreading ripple in the flock.

To capture the flowing nature of the murmuration, photographer and scientist Kathryn Cooper layers multiple images of the starlings atop one another. The birds themselves become pathlines marking the murmuration’s motion. The final images are surprisingly varied in form. Some flocks resemble a downpour of rain; others the dangling branches of a tree. (Image credit: K. Cooper; via Colossal)

#activeMatter #biology #birds #collectiveMotion #flocking #flowVisualization #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #murmuration #physics #science

Image by Kathryn Cooper.

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