Tuesday, April 19, 2011

WATER DROPS


The Daily Mail recently ran an article about German artist Markus Reugels' high-speed photos (above) of splashing water drops. He uses color filters but claims there's no digital manipulation...these are just the way the camera saw them.



The mushroom top is fairly common, so is the "skirt" around the middle. But where does the skirt come from?


 Sometimes it comes when a double mushroom appears at the top, and the bottom mushroom expands as it's stretched downward.

It explodes and forms a ring. That kind of ring is easy to explain...but not all rings are like that. Some just seem to appear in the middle.



Here's (above) a better picture of the double mushroom top before the bottom mushroom is torn apart. The long stem explodes at the bottom, maybe (I'm guessing) because its in two parts and the top part is collapsing onto the base.



Why all the interest in water drops? Well, for an artist the appeal is obvious, but there's more to it than that. For a physicist the fascinating part comes when the splash debris expands and thins out. There's a point at which purely mechanical effects recede from our attention and you have to wonder if the indirect results of quantum effects are coming into play.



Weird, unearthly shapes (above) appear for an instant. It's hard to account for some of these, but maybe that's because there's so many variables. The artist sometimes used additives like sugar and Rinse All, and who knows what minerals were in the water?


To understand simple splashes we'll need even more improvements in high speed photography. The world of the small is surprisingly strange and unfamiliar. I read somewhere that no one actually understands how things catch fire. So many chemical and state changes take place in a small amount of time that no one can keep track of it all. The author thought that high speed photography might help, but that it would have to be much improved over the current state of the art.

6 comments:

Lester Hunt said...

The multiple caps and skirts are probably the result of multiple drops falling in rapid succession in the same place. As to the other weird effects, I am at a loss!

BTW, this reminds me of watching, as a kid, an episode of Disneyland or Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color about the animators studying high-speed photos of water drops. I think it was for the rain shower scene in Bambi.

Anonymous said...

Holy cow! These are awesome. I didn't know one man could do so much with mere splashing water. It astounds me how science continues to rapidly evolve and change as the years go by and how sometimes, it truly can be artful. Maybe science could give animators a cheap, convenient way of bringing full animation (along with all the smear animation and other small tidbits that made the older cartoons great) back to the country on a TV budget. Oh well, I'm way over my head there. We've been outsourcing animation for over 50 years now and will probably have to for who knows how long...sorry for going off topic, but I had some thoughts I needed to write anyway.

Steven M. said...

It's amazing what goes on it the simplest of things.

Smackmonkey said...

Very cool. And here we thought Muybridge showed us everything we needed.

Eddie Fitzgerald said...

Lester: Multiple drops...that never occurred to me. I may have seen the Disney show you talked about.

An interesting show could also have been done about explosions. My recollection of the last one I saw in slow motion was that after the initial flash, puff balls of smoke form and jostle each other for room, then these are blown away by a second wave of denser puff balls.

Roberto: Interesting! Maybe that'll happen!

Anonymous said...

hey Eddie I'm just curious if you've seen the South Korean film Oldboy? you seem like the kind of person that would really appreciate it and the direction and whatnot.

apologies for being off topic. These splashes are pretty awesome.

sean