- Series
- Other Talks
- Time
- Wednesday, December 8, 2010 - 3:00pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Physics Howey L5
- Speaker
- Wendy W. Zhang – Physics Department and the James Franck Institute, University of Chicago
- Organizer
In school, we learned that fluid flow becomes simple in two
limits. Over long lengthscales and at high speeds, inertia dominates and the
motion can approach that of a perfect fluid with zero viscosity. On short
lengthscales and at slow speeds, viscous dissipation is important. Fluid
flows that correspond to the formation of a finite-time singularity in the
continuum description involve both a vanishing characteristic lengthscale
and a diverging velocity scale. These flows can therefore evolve into final
limits that defy expectations derived from properties of their initial
states. This talk focuses on 3 familiar processes that belong in this
category: the formation of a splash after a liquid drop collides with a dry
solid surface, the emergence of a highly-collimated sheet from the impact of
a jet of densely-packed, dry grains, and the pinch-off of an underwater
bubble. In all three cases, the motion is dominated by inertia but a small
amount of dissipation is also present. Our works show that dissipation is
important for the onset of splash, plays a minor role in the ejecta sheet
formation after jet impact, but becomes irrelevant in the break-up of an
underwater bubble. An important consequence of this evolution towards
perfect-fluid flow is that deviations from cylindrical symmetry in the
initial stages of pinch-off are not erased by the dynamics. Theory,
simulation and experiment show detailed memories of initial imperfections
remain encoded, eventually controlling the mode of break-up. In short, the
final outcome is not controlled by a single universal singularity but
instead displays an infinite variety.