Físicos recrean el efecto Schwinger con helio superfluido

¿Cómo crees que este avance en la recreación del efecto Schwinger con helio superfluido podría impactar en futuras investigaciones sobre la física cuántica, especialmente en relación con los vórtices y las transiciones de fase?

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#VonKarmanVortices form when fast-moving winds encounter an obstacle, such as an island or mountain, disrupting airflow and creating alternating spinning eddies on either side.

The #vortices over #HeardIsland were instead marked by dense, perfectly circular gaps in the clouds, making this event stand out from typical occurrences.

#NASA image by Jeff Schmaltz, LANCE/EOSDIS Rapid Response.
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/science/nasa-captured-10-mysterious-dark-voids-over-remote-island-near-antarctica-what-they-reveal-about-the-bizarre-natural-phenomena/articleshow/123305717.cms

Let yourself be hypnotized by these #rotor #clouds. The wind blows over the #mountain ridge and the setting sun behind the ridge gives the background light. The #vortices are very coherent. This #timelapse compresses around 30 min. into 15 secs.

#Science
#Physics
#Atmosphere

Flamingo Fluid Dynamics, Part 2: The Game’s a Foot

Yesterday we saw how hunting flamingos use their heads and beaks to draw out and trap various prey. Today we take another look at the same study, which shows that flamingos use their footwork, too. If you watch flamingos on a beach, in muddy waters, or in a shallow pool, you’ll see them shifting back and forth as they lift and lower their feet. In humans, we might attribute this to nervous energy, but it turns out it’s another flamingo hunting habit.

As a flamingo raises its foot, it draws its toes together; when it stomps down, its foot spreads outward. This morphing shape, researchers discovered, creates a standing vortex just ahead of its feet — right where it lowers its head to sample whatever hapless creatures it has caught in this swirling vortex. And the vortex, as shown below, is strong enough to trap even active swimmers, making the flamingo a hard hunter to escape. (Image credit: top – L. Yukai, others – V. Ortega-Jimenez et al.; research credit: V. Ortega-Jimenez et al.; submitted by Soh KY)

#biology #flamingo #flowVisualization #fluidDynamics #fluidsAsArt #physics #science #vortices

Flamingo Fluid Dynamics, Part 1: A Head in the Game

Flamingos are unequivocally odd-looking birds with their long skinny legs, sinuous necks, and bent L-shaped beaks. They are filter-feeders, but a new study shows that they are far from passive wanderers looking for easy prey in shallow waters. Instead, flamingos are active hunters, using fluid dynamics to draw out and trap the quick-moving invertebrates they feed on. In today’s post, I’ll focus on how flamingos use their heads and beaks; next time, we’ll take a look at what they do with their feet.

Feeding flamingos often bob their heads out of the water. This, it turns out, is not indecision, but a strategy. Lifting its flat upper forebeak from near the bottom of a pool creates suction. That suction creates a tornado-like vortex that helps draw food particles and prey from the muddy sediment.

When feeding, flamingos will also open and close their mandibles about 12 times a second in a behavior known as chattering. This movement, as seen in the video above, creates a flow that draws particles — and even active swimmers! — toward its beak at about seven centimeters a second.

Staying near the surface won’t keep prey safe from flamingos, either. In slow-flowing water, the birds will set the upper surface of their forebeak on the water, tip pointed downstream. This seems counterintuitive, until you see flow visualization around the bird’s head, as above. Von Karman vortices stream off the flamingo’s head, which creates a slow-moving recirculation zone right by the tip of the bird’s beak. Brine shrimp eggs get caught in these zones, delivering themselves right to the flamingo’s mouth.

Clearly, the flamingo is a pretty sophisticated hunter! It’s actively drawing out and trapping prey with clever fluid dynamics. Tomorrow we’ll take a look at some of its other tricks. (Image credit: top – G. Cessati, others – V. Ortega-Jimenez et al.; research credit: V. Ortega-Jimenez et al.; submitted by Soh KY)

#biology #filterFeeding #flamingo #flowVisualization #fluidDynamics #physics #science #suction #vortices

Filtering Like a Manta Ray

As manta rays swim, they’re constantly doing two important — but not necessarily compatible — things: getting oxygen to breathe and collecting plankton to eat. That requires some expert filtering to send food particles toward their stomach and oxygen-rich water to their gills. Manta rays do this with a built-in filter that resembles an industrial crossflow filter. Researchers built a filter inspired by a manta ray’s geometry, and found that it has three different flow states, based on the flow speed. At low speeds, flow moves freely down the filter’s channels; in a manta, this would carry both water and particles toward the gills. At medium speeds, vortices start to form at the entrance to the filter channels. This sends large particles downstream (toward a manta’s digestive system) while water passes down the channels. At even greater speeds, each channel entrance develops a vortex. That allows water to pass down the filter channels but keeps particles out. (Image credit: manta – N. Weldingh, filter – X. Mao et al.; research credit: X. Mao et al.; via Ars Technica)

Depending on the flow speed, a manta-inspired filter can allow both water and particles in or filter particles out of the water.

#biology #filterFeeding #filtration #flowVisualization #fluidDynamics #mantaRay #physics #science #vortices

Cross-flow filtration - Wikipedia

Kolk (vortex) (Oceanography 🌊)

A kolk is an underwater vortex causing hydrodynamic scour by rapidly rushing water past an underwater obstacle. High-velocity gradients produce a high-shear rotating column of water, similar to a tornado. Kolks can pluck multiple-ton blocks of rock and transport them in suspension for kilometres. Kolks leave clear evidence in the form of kolk lakes, a kind...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kolk_(vortex)

#Kolk #Vortices #Oceanography #Geomorphology #Hydrodynamics

Kolk (vortex) - Wikipedia

Here's another video of the dry ice 'smoke' doing its thing. #slowMotion #physics #vortices #slomo #fluidDynamics #🧪
Bluesky

Bluesky Social

Crowd Vortices

The Feast of San Fermín in Pamplona, Spain draws crowds of thousands. Scientists recently published an analysis of the crowd motion in these dense gatherings. The team filmed the crowds at the festival from balconies overlooking the plaza in 2019, 2022, 2023, and 2024. Analyzing the footage, they discovered that at crowd densities above 4 people per square meter, the crowd begins to move in almost imperceptible eddies. In the animation below, lines trace out the path followed by single individuals in the crowd, showing the underlying “vortex.” At the plaza’s highest density — 9 people per square meter — one rotation of the vortex took about 18 seconds.

The team found similar patterns in footage of the crowd at the 2010 Love Parade disaster, in which 21 people died. These patterns aren’t themselves an indicator of an unsafe crowd — none of the studied Pamplona crowds had a problem — but understanding the underlying dynamics should help planners recognize and prevent dangerous crowd behaviors before the start of a stampede. (Image credit: still – San Fermín, animation – Bartolo Lab; research credit: F. Gu et al.; via Nature)

#activeMatter #collectiveMotion #crowds #fluidDynamics #physics #science #vortices

Tropical cyclone (Storm 🌪️)

A tropical cyclone is a rapidly rotating storm system with a low-pressure area, a closed low-level atmospheric circulation, strong winds, and a spiral arrangement of thunderstorms that produce heavy rain and squalls. Depending on its location and strength, a tropical cyclone is called a hurricane, typhoon, tropical storm, cyclonic st...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tropical_cyclone

#TropicalCyclone #Storm #Vortices #TypesOfCyclone #WeatherHazards #TropicalCyclones

Tropical cyclone - Wikipedia