View allAll Photos Tagged FluidDynamics

The event, which took place from 19th to 23th January 2015, was organized by CMM and the Doctorate Program on Fluid Dynamics. It gathered students who aim to enroll in this postgraduate degree.

It was an intense week focused on experimental systems outside of equilibrium, waves turbulences, inverse problems in fluid mechanics, or internal waves in stratified water bodies.

the first few seconds define the pattern

My first outing to our forest after the flood. Ravaging waters brought in a ton of debris on the river banks.

... new colours revealed beneath

Listerine-turquoise strikes again - black wavy sea, white spray and just below the surface, shades of greeny-blue...

 

Taken from the ferry on the way between Orkney and north Scotland.

small scale jump jets

organic form making its way outward

radial spread, like an organic form, near a piece of sunlight, older and more complex

cosmic mood - fast evolving patterns move out into the surrounding darkness

Blue and yellow coloured ink move away from the bubble's glassy interior

azure flow flowing past the red

On February 14 2015 I joined the Boneyard Safari Hands on Tour at Aircraft Restoration & Marketing LLC. It's a great opportunity to explore interesting aircraft (condition may very) and learn a lot of history of the various aircraft.

www.facebook.com/BoneyardSafari

RAW file processed with Olympus Viewer 3.

Ralph's mission statement mentions the willingness and ability to handle special assignments. Here he is acting as a "Desert Environment Wind Indicator Support Device." The wind affected the use of a camping stove. His posture (an optical illusion) did not adversely affect the operation of the system.

 

Photographed on the playa on the north side of Pigeon Mountain.

Crispy clean white foam, the contrast with black water.

Taken from the ferry on the way between Orkney and north Scotland.

fast-moving films capture light as they go

Columbus, Ohio

.. plunging down towards the gold

all will change very soon - just one moment in time defined by colour

Water Channel Setup

Bedrock of Winter Camp Wash, just above a waterfall.

Water flowed from left to right.

Width of scene is about 5 feet (1.3m).

 

In late 2010, several people at CFHT started construction of a scale model of our summit facility so that we could do some fluid dynamics testing on the building.

 

This is a section of the terrain model as well as the building model. On the left side you can see one of the six outside dye probes. There are another five inside the building, one of which can be seen leaking dye into the optical path of the telescope model.

 

No effort was made to control reflections during this test. The lighting was horrid, but we demonstrated that our video cameras could record dye flow. Success!

...in action. Rough seas at South Beach, Pacific Rim National Park, June 2007.

second of three; long white jets developing

boston, massachusetts

may 1958

 

water rocket

 

grown men having fun with a water rocket and fluid dynamics. part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

Looking east-southeast from the Colockum Wildlife Area at the Colombia River flowing past West Bar. A farmer is plowing a field at bottom right.

 

Photographed during a trip to West Bar, Washington, site of huge ripples caused by the Ice Age floods.

 

gold lace in space with threaded forms

In late 2010, several people at CFHT started construction of a scale model of our summit facility so that we could do some fluid dynamics testing on the building.

 

This is a test tank we built that copies a section of the water tunnel facility we plan to use with our model. This let us test assembly, disassembly, dome rotation, our dye probes, etc. It won't play any role in the real tests, but it's proving to be a good tool for making the most of our limited time on the real water tunnel facility.

Flow: Left to Right

White: Primary Flow (High Velocity)

Pink: Separation Zone (Low Velocity)

Blue: Reverse Flow

the thinnest layers unfurl in the water - shape is retained through movement

with gold at the forefront

Pink petals float gracefully in a turquoise embrace, their colors and forms artistically enhanced by the power of AI.

 

Duncan.co/botanical-reflections

The image stands as a testament to the unending wonders of science and the unfathomable depths of nature's complexities. A ferrofluid has transformed into an otherworldly landscape, an iron-rich liquid, shaped into innumerable spikes by magnetic forces. The intricate spiky mounds, resembling an alien terrain or a bizarre underwater flora, carry a stark metallic sheen. A play of light and dark accentuates each minute detail, granting an almost three-dimensional depth to the photograph. The result is a unique vision that teeters on the edge of the real and surreal. Straddling the domains of art and physics, this image by Duncan Rawlinson lays bare the fascinating contours of the invisible magnetic fields that surround us, bringing to life the abstract forms they can create. Each spike is an individual testament to this unseen force, a minute but powerful affirmation of the omnipresence of physics in our universe.

 

Duncan.co/fringe-of-physics

... riding on the wave

1 2 ••• 16 17 19 21 22 ••• 35 36