#viscousFlow

2025-07-15

Venusian Gravity Currents

Radar measurements of Venus‘s surface reveal the remains of many volcanic eruptions. One type of feature, known as a pancake dome, has a very flat top and steep sides; one dome, Narina Tholus, is over 140 kilometers wide. Since their discovery, scientists have been puzzling out how such domes could form. A recent study suggests that the Venusian surface’s elasticity plays a role.

According to current models, the pancake domes are gravity currents (like a cold draft under your door, an avalanche, or the Boston Molasses Flood), albeit ones so viscous that they may require hundreds of thousands of Earth-years to settle. Researchers found that their simulated pancake domes best matched measurements from Venus when the lava was about 2.5 times denser than water and flowed over a flexible crust.

We might have more data to support (or refute) the study’s conclusions soon, but only if NASA’s VERITAS mission to Venus is not cancelled. (Image credit: NASA; research credit: M. Borelli et al.; via Gizmodo)

#fluidDynamics #gravityCurrents #physics #planetaryScience #science #venus #viscosity #viscousFlow #volcano

Venusian volcanic eruptions have left behind "pancake domes" with flat tops and steep sides.
2025-06-23

“Droplet on a Plucked Wire”

What happens to a droplet hanging on a wire when the wire gets plucked? That’s the fundamental question behind this video, which shows the effects of wire speed, viscosity, and viscoelasticity on a drop’s detachment. With lovely high-speed video and close-up views, you get to appreciate even subtle differences between each drop. Capillary waves, viscoelastic waves, and Plateau-Rayleigh instabilities abound! (Video and image credit: D. Maity et al.)

#2024gofm #droplets #fluidDynamics #physics #science #viscoelasticity #viscousFlow

2025-05-26

Bigger Particles Slide Farther

Mudslides and avalanches typically carry debris of many shapes and sizes. To understand how debris size affects flows like these, researchers use simplified, laboratory-scale experiments like this one. Here, researchers mix a slurry of silicone oil and glass particles of roughly two sizes. The red particles are larger; the blue ones smaller. Sitting in a cup, the mixture tends to separate, with red particles sinking faster to form the bottom layer and smaller blue particles collecting on top. And what happens when such a mixture flows down an incline? The smaller blue particles tend to settle out sooner, leaving the larger red particles in suspension as they flow downstream. (Video and image credit: S. Burnett et al.)

#2024gofm #flowVisualization #fluidDynamics #gravityCurrent #particleSuspension #physics #science #suspension #viscousFlow

2025-05-01

Martian Mud Volcanoes

Mars features mounds that resemble our terrestrial mud volcanoes, suggesting that a similar form of mudflow occurs on Mars. But Mars’ thin atmosphere and frigid temperatures mean that water — a prime ingredient of any mud — is almost always in either solid or gaseous form on the planet. So researchers explored whether salty muds could flow under Martian conditions. They tested a variety of salts, at different concentrations, in a low-pressure chamber calibrated to Mars-like temperatures and pressures. The salts lowered water’s freezing point, allowing the muds to remain fluid. Even a relatively small amount of sodium chloride — 2.5% by weight — allowed muds to flow far. The team also found that the salt content affected the shape the flowing mud took, with flows ranging from narrow, ropey patterns to broad, even sheets. (Image credit: P. Brož/Wikimedia Commons; research credit: O. Krýza et al.; via Eos)

#fluidDynamics #geophysics #Mars #mud #mudPots #mudVolcano #physics #planetaryScience #science #viscousFlow

Mud volcanoes here on Earth.
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.
2024-10-09

Like most microswimmers, these Synura uvella algae use cilia to swim. Cilia are tiny, hair-like appendages that flap to produce thrust. Even under a microscope, the cilia are hard to see because they are so thin and move quickly in and out of the microscope’s narrow focus. A cilia’s stroke is always asymmetric — no simple back-and-forth motions for them — because, at the algae’s scale, symmetric motion won’t move you anywhere. This is a peculiar feature of small swimmers in viscous fluids. At the human scale, we can mimic the same physics by mixing and unmixing fluids like corn syrup. (Video and image credit: L. Cesteros; via Nikon Small World in Motion)

Synura uvella algae swimming under magnification.

https://fyfluiddynamics.com/2024/10/swimming-with-cilia/

#biology #cilia #fluidDynamics #laminarFlow #microswimmer #physics #science #viscousFlow

2024-07-05

For this latest experimental film, artist Roman De Giuli provides a glimpse of the unique fluid art machine he’s built over the last 3.5 years. With 10 channels driven by peristasltic tube pumps and stepper motors, his “printer” drips up to 10 colors on a paint-covered, tilted canvas to create these beautiful images. As he says in his description of the invention, the set-up produces paint layering that’s almost impossible to create by hand. Fluid dynamically speaking, we’re seeing gravity currents like a lava flow or avalanche that are mixing together viscously. There’s also some added effects from density differences between different layered paint colors. Artistically, this machine offers an infinite palette of visual opportunities; financially, though, De Giuli admits its an absolute beast at consuming paint! (Image and video credit: R. De Giuli)

https://fyfluiddynamics.com/2024/07/emitter/

#flowVisualization #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #gravityCurrent #mixing #physics #RayleighTaylorInstability #science #viscousFlow

2024-07-02

Most microphones — like our ears — work by sensing the tiny pressure changes caused by a sound wave‘s passing. But for microphones built this way, the smaller they get, the more sensitive they are to thermal noise. That’s one reason that the tiny microphones in a laptop or webcam just don’t sound as good as larger mics.

Researchers turned to nature to look for alternative ways to measure sound and zeroed in on the mechanism spiders use. Spiders “listen” to their web’s vibrations; the tiny strands of silk quiver as air flow from a sound moves past. Instead of being pressure-based, this mechanism uses viscous drag to register a sound.

The team fabricated an array of microbeams to test the concept of a viscosity-based microphone and found that tiny beams sensed sounds just as well as larger ones. That means these microphones can get smaller without sacrificing performance. For now, they’re not as sensitive as conventional microphones, but that’s not surprising, given that engineers have been improving pressure-based microphones for 150 years. It’s a promising start for a new technology, though. (Image credit: N. Fewings; research credit: J. Lai et al.; via APS Physics)

https://fyfluiddynamics.com/2024/07/sensing-sound-like-spiderwebs/

#acoustics #biology #fluidDynamics #physics #science #spiders #viscousDrag #viscousFlow

Spiders sense sounds not through pressure waves, but by the viscous drag they exert on the thin strands of their webs.

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