Aging Salty Ice

When ice forms in salty water, it starts out mushy and porous. Salt does not freeze neatly into iceโ€™s crystalline structure, so the forming ice has pores and gaps where salty brine gathers. As the ice ages, more brine is pushed out and gradually convects downward, due to its greater density. Over time, this makes the ice layer thinner but more solid, with fewer pores. You can see a timelapse of the process in a laboratory experiment below. (Image credit: sea ice โ€“ C. Matias, experiment โ€“ F. Wang et al.; research credit: F. Wang et al.)

#convection #fluidDynamics #freezing #ice #iceFormation #physics #porosity #porousFlow #science #seaIce
@admin ok. Saw this was posted on St Patrickโ€™s Day and at first thought the video clip on the right was a glass of Guinness. https://youtu.be/VP93oO4eTYs?t=48&si=uOK3V_Z-3rSfMi1H
How to pour the perfect pint of Guinness

YouTube
@demallien LOL! I definitely did not think of that comparison when I scheduled this post. That said, Iโ€™ve got posts on Guinness physics, too: https://fyfluiddynamics.com/tagged/beer/
FYFD

Celebrating the physics of all that flows

FYFD