Physicist Richard Feynman once famously ended a lecture by describing how the whole universe can be found in a glass of wine. And there is certainly plenty of fluid dynamics in one. In the photo above, we see in the shadows how a film of wine drips down into the main pool below. This effect is known by many names, including tears of wine and wine legs; it can also be found in other high alcohol content beverages. Several effects are at play. Capillary action, the same effect that allows plants to draw water up from their roots, helps the wine flow up the wall of the glass. At the same time, the alcohol in this wine film evaporates faster than the water, raising the surface tension of the wine film relative to the main pool of wine below. Because of this gradient in surface tension, the wine will tend to flow up the walls of the glass away from the area of lower surface tension. This Marangoni effect also helps draw the wine upward. When the weight of the wine film is too great for capillary action and surface tension to hold it in place, droplets of wine—the legs themselves—flow back downward. (Photo credit: Greg Emel)
When a drop impacts a pool at very low velocity, a thin layer of air can be trapped between the drop and the pool. When this air film ruptures, a ring of microbubbles forms and expands. Multiple “bubble necklaces” can form if the film ruptures at several points. These rings travel outward until the film is completely destroyed, leaving a chandelier-like shape of microbubbles. See the phenomenon in action with one of the videos linked here. (Photo credit: S. T. Thoroddson et al.; see video at arXiv)
From a series called “Surface Tension,” these ink and water drawings by Marguerite French explore the effects of diffusion, surface tension, and evaporation. The forms left by the thin layer of liquids suggest other natural processes like erosion, weathering, and the rings inside trees. (Photo credits: Marguerite French)
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)
A drop of silicone oil falling through a liquid with lower surface tension distorts into multiple vortex rings connected by thin films. This behavior is caused by the interaction between viscous and capillary forces and is observable for only a narrow range of oil viscosities. (Photo credit: A. Felce and T. Cubaud)
Flowing soap films provide an educational and beautiful method for visualizing the wakes of objects in two-dimensional flows. High-speed photography highlights the interference patterns on the soap film, providing detail without the necessity for the particulate tracking of other flow visualization methods. Highlights here include wakes behind bluff bodies, interacting cylinders, and flapping flags. (pdf) #
Wired Science has published a gallery of fluid dynamics photos and videos, several of which have been featured here previously. There’s some neat stuff there, well worth checking out. #
This image shows two flags oriented in line with a film flowing top to bottom. The second flag interrupts the wake of the first one, which reduces the drag experienced by the first flag and increases that on the second. This is called inverted drafting and occurs because the flags are passive objects that bend to every change in the flow. #
A stationary soap film disturbed by a flapping foil (seen in the top center) creates a butterfly-like double spiral roll. Two vortices form at the tip of the foil each time it changes direction; look carefully and you can see those tiny vortices all the way through the spirals. (From the 2010 Gallery of Fluid Motion; pdf)
In this Saturday Morning Science video, astronaut Don Pettit demonstrates Marangoni convection in microgravity using a water film with tracer particles, a soldering iron, and a flashlight. This same effect occurs on earth but is masked behind the much stronger effect of buoyant convection.