Vanishing Spirits: Cognac

Years ago, photographer Ernie Button discovered an intriguing stain left behind in his whiskey glass after the last drops evaporated. That discovery led both to beautiful images and an entire scientific paper analyzing how the alcohol, surfactants, and polymers in the whiskey combined to leave such a uniform stain. Over the years, Button continued investigating liquor stains, looking at gin, rice whisky, and aging effects. Here, he’s turned his lens to cognac, producing stains that look like oil slicks, aerial landscapes, and even cartoonish faces! (Image and submission credit: E. Button)

#alcohol #chemistry #evaporation #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #marangoniEffect #physics #science

Drying Out Microbe-Filled Droplets

Ocean sprays, coughs, and sneezes are just a few of the ways that droplets full of bacteria and salt can get aloft on a breeze. How do these bacteria stay viable even as their droplet evaporates? That’s the question behind this video’s research.

When a bacteria-laden droplet or a salt-laden droplet dries, the evaporating droplet’s contact area shrinks, leaving behind only a concentrated lump of bacteria or salt. But when droplets contain both salt and bacteria, the drying droplet’s contact line gets pinned, leaving a larger area stain. The bacteria’s presence seems to promote crystallization of the salt, which–in turn–traps water in isolated spaces, perhaps helping the bacteria stay viable longer. (Video and image credit: R. Ran et al.)

Animation of three droplets drying out. When all three components–water, salt, and bacteria–are in a droplet, the drying process looks very different. #2026gosm #aerosols #biology #contactLine #droplets #evaporation #flowVisualization #fluidDynamics #physics #pinning #science #sessileDrop

How does a droplet dry when space is confined?

Experiments by B. Sobac and colleagues using interferometry and controlled humidity track the evaporation of binary liquid droplets in a 2D geometry.

Useful for studying droplet evaporation.

🔗 https://journals.aps.org/prfluids/abstract/10.1103/9zdm-drvp

#FluidDynamics #Droplets #Evaporation #SoftMatter #TransportPhenomena

“Crystal Garden – Seasons”

In this latest project, the Beauty of Science team explores colorful crystallization as chemicals precipitate out of evaporating solutions. The variety of shapes and colors is incredible. To see many more of these crystalline “gardens,” check out the video below and the project’s webpage. (Video and image credit: W. Zhu/Beauty of Science; via Colossal)

https://vimeo.com/1155318039?fl=pl&fe=cm

#crystalGrowth #evaporation #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #physics #science #timelapse

The Balvenie

Photographer Ernie Button explores the stains left behind when various liquors evaporate. This one comes from a single malt scotch whisky by The Balvenie. The stain itself is made up of particles left behind when the alcohol and water in the whisky evaporate. The pattern itself depends on a careful interplay between surface tension, evaporation, pinning forces, and internal convection as the whisky puddle dries out. (Image credit: E. Button/CUPOTY; via Colossal)

#alcohol #deposition #evaporation #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #physics #science #surfaceTension

In China's boreal forests, a new study reveals evaporation's dominant role in evapotranspiration, highlighting the need for better water management strategies!👇
#forest #evaporation
@Forestecosystems
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2197562025000946

Growing Salty

Ngangla Ringco sits atop the Tibetan Plateau, breaking up the barren landscape with eye-catching teal and blue. This saline lake sits at an altitude of 4,700 meters, fed by rainfall, Himalayan runoff, and melting glaciers and permafrost. The lake, like many inland bodies of salt water, has no outflow. Instead, water evaporates from the lake, leaving behind any salts that were dissolved in it. Over time, those left-behind salts build up and make the lake ever saltier. (Image credit: NASA; via NASA Earth Observatory)

#astronaut #dissolution #evaporation #fluidDynamics #physics #salinity #satelliteImage #science

Dissolution and Crystallization

A colorful assortment of salts dissolve and recrystallize in this microscopic timelapse video by retired engineer Jay McClellan. Every step is a gorgeous rainbow of color as the cobalt, copper, and sodium chlorides dissolve, mix, and change. Though we don’t see what’s going on in the water, fluid dynamics are a critical component of both dissolution and crystallization. In the former, concentration gradients change the water’s density, driving buoyant flows. For the latter, crystallization comes out of evaporation, where surface tension often determines where solid particles get left behind. (Video and image credit: J. McClellan; via Colossal)

#buoyancy #dissolution #evaporation #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #physics #science

#evaporation thickens the usd, there wind and waters wing it into piles of sky "mouse"