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Science Llama

@the-science-llama / the-science-llama.tumblr.com

Science, Astronomy, Technology, Art and general Awesomeness
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You’d be forgiven for thinking that the star-nosed mole looks funny. Its distinctive star-shaped nose is a highly-sensitive organ, but the mole doesn’t just use it for finding its way through the underground tunnels it lives in. These moles can actually sniff underwater. By exhaling a bubble and then re-inspiring it, the moles collect scent particles that they can use to locate food. In experiments, both star-nosed moles and water shrews could use this technique to successfully follow a scent trail, demonstrating exploring and pausing behaviors similar to terrestrial sniffing as they did. To learn more about this impressive mammal, listen to the latest episode of Science Friday, where research Ken Catania describes his work with them. (Image credits: K. Catania; via Science Friday)

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“Aerosolized microorganisms may play an important role in climate change, disease transmission, water and soil contaminants, and geographic migration of microbes. While it is known that bioaerosols are generated when bubbles break on the surface of water containing microbes, it is largely unclear how viable soil-based microbes are transferred to the atmosphere. Here we report a previously unknown mechanism by which rain disperses soil bacteria into the air. Bubbles, tens of micrometres in size, formed inside the raindrops disperse micro-droplets containing soil bacteria during raindrop impingement. A single raindrop can transfer 0.01% of bacteria on the soil surface and the bacteria can survive more than one hour after the aerosol generation process. This work further reveals that bacteria transfer by rain is highly dependent on the regional soil profile and climate conditions.” Via.

Source: nature.com
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Two vortex rings travelling along the same line can repeatedly leapfrog one another. During my recent visit to the University of Chicago, PhD student Robert Morton of the Irvine Lab demonstrated this leapfrogging in the same apparatus they use to study knotted vortices. Leapfrogging works because of the mutual interaction of the flow fields of the two vortex rings. Their influence on one another causes the front vortex ring to slow down and widen while the trailing vortex narrows and speeds up. Once the vortices have switched places, the process repeats. In a real fluid, viscosity eventually breaks things down and causes the vortex rings to merge, but in simulation, inviscid vortex rings can leapfrog indefinitely. Our friend Physics Girl even showed that half-vortex-rings can leapfrog. (Image credit: N. Sharp; thanks to R. Morton for the demo)

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"Watch what happens when force is applied to amazing and mind bending Non-Newtonian Liquid and filmed in slow motion."

What is it?

Oobleck

"An inexpensive, non-toxic example of a non-Newtonian fluid is a suspension of starch (e.g. cornstarch) in water, sometimes called “oobleck” or “ooze” (1 part of water to 1.5–2 parts of corn starch]. [8][9] Uncooked imitation custard, a suspension of primarily cornflour, has the same properties. The name “oobleck” is derived from the Dr. Seuss book Bartholomew and the Oobleck.”

Source: youtube.com
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Cold weather can create some wild fluid dynamics, so pay attention to your local rivers and waterfalls during the next cold snap. The video above comes from North Dakota where a combination of cold dense air and a stable river eddy created a spinning ice disk, roughly 16 meters in diameter. The disk forms as a collection of ice chunks—not one solid, spinning piece—because the ice formed gradually. As ice pieces form, they get caught in the river eddy and begin to spin as part of the disk, rather like dust and ice do in the rings of Saturn. Such formations are rare but not unheard of; here’s a video showing a similar disk as it grows. (Video credit: G. Loegering; via Yahoo and io9; submitted by Simon H and John C)

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Mushrooms "Make their own wind" to spread spores

The wind is created by evaporating moisture off the surface of the mushroom. Evaporation creates dense cold air, which flows and spreads out, and water-vapor -- which is less dense than air -- giving its spores some lift to eventually be carried a few inches (~4 inches) away. This is important since many fungi don't grow tall enough to pass the very still air next to the ground called the "boundary layer". There are other methods of spore dispersal to get past this boundary layer, some launch their spores at high speeds like the Pilobolus... ...others may just use the wind or passing animals. Here is an example of a "puffball" spore dispersal as raindrops hit and release spores into the air.

Read more: SciAm, Herbarium

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Sonoluminescence The emission of light from imploding bubbles in liquids. The Pistol and Mantis Shrimp are capable of doing this as well though the light they produce is different and less intense, plus the mantis shrimp is just badass. I wanted to post this now because of that recent post of the AK-47 underwater where Destin said there may have been some of this going on when the bubbles from the gun collapsed. You can watch that video to learn more about what is going on here, but sonoluminescence is still trying to be understood.

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These images from Earth Observatory show islands creating 'von Karman vortices' in the stratocumulus clouds. In the animation you can see that each vortex is formed from alternating sides of the object that is impeding flow of the fluid such as clouds or soap films.

In the first image, the water droplets in the clouds create an optical phenomena known as 'Glory', making the rainbow to the left. However, this is different from a rainbow, in that it is formed from backwards diffraction meaning they are always directly opposite to the Sun.

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As a flapping object moves through a fluid, many patterns of vortices can form in its wake. The familiar von Karman vortex street, so often seen in clouds or behind cylinders, is only the beginning. In the photo above, a symmetric foil flaps in a vertical soap film; as the amplitude and frequency of the oscillation varies, the wake patterns it produces change dramatically.  From left to right, a) a von Karman wake; b) an inverted von Karman wake; c) a 2P wake, in which two vortex pairs are shed with each cycle; d) a 2P+2S wake, in which two vortex pairs and two single vortices are shed per cycle; e) a 4P wake; and f) a 4P+2S wake. See some of these flows in action in these videos. (Photo credit: T. Schnipper et al.)

Source: vimeo.com
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