View allAll Photos Tagged FluidDynamics

how high can you fly?

new forms unfold in dark space

In these forms evolution takes place not over hundreds of years, but in hundredths of a second ... an identity crisis is likely ...

 

some shapeshifters in here

no stopping this one.

conspicuous consumption - 'black' hole sucking in the stars

... towards new territories

textures on and through the water

this fizz has just one bubble in it

I've been wanting to do this for a long time now. I've been waiting for someone to help and a clear night with a full moon over head to get the right exposure. I attempted it once before at a different location, but it didn't turn out like I had hoped. This time it was a lot closer to what I envisioned. A friend and I brought over 100 glow sticks into the woods. My friend went up stream, around the bend and threw the glow sticks in the stream while I gathered them down stream, just past my camera. I built a net with chicken wire to try and catch the glow sticks, but I still ended up chasing after some that made it through somehow. Unfortunately, a lot of glow sticks got stuck on things, which makes the video a little less awesome, but it looks pretty neat none the less. This is 319 photos merged into one image using the lighten layer-blending mode in photoshop.

and sunshine too

escape to bubbleisland ...

inky black skies, but there is an inner illumination

a collabo with G

of a selectively-lit soap bubble

 

(It was quite the gymnastic with the lamp and the camera :-)

born from a bubble

part of a larger piece with so much detail and complexity I have made two images from it

streaming out and down

an evolutionary journey.

Title from Paul Haslinger's piece of the same name

flying off toward warmer climes

progress through elongation and networking

liquid imprisonment

eating amongst the stars

.. not so keen on B&W

Soft pastel on 16”x20” canvas paper.

a rare purple fish spotted doing its thing

maybe a river down below

from deepest darkness comes the brightest lightness

Laminar Switching To Turbulent Flow of water from a kitchen faucet.

stargazing bubblebeetle

somewhere far away

Pouring cream into a cup of tea is an excellent demonstration of several principles of Physics and mathematics; expecially fluid dynamics and chaos theory.

 

Can you see the tea bag?

seen at night time

making the links through the stars

a benign force, but also looks like he might have vertigo

bubbles and fizz go together

Water droplet collision - blue/black food coloring with yellow background

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