Showing posts with label high speed photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label high speed photography. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Super Hydrophobic Surface and Magnetic Liquid



The Slow Mo Guys make videos showing actions in - shockingly, I know - slow motion.

Here they're in a GE lab showing 'how water reacts on a superhydrophobic surface,' in their words. Personally, I'd've liked to have seen a single drop on the surface, but the beauty of the two differently-colored streams coming together and showing almost no interaction with the white surface is pretty cool, too.

The last part of the video also shows a ferrofluid attracting to a magnet.

Monday, March 25, 2013

Mystery of Prince Rupert's Drop at 130,000 fps - Smarter Every Day 86



Prince Rupert's drops (also known as dragon tears) are beautiful explorations of tempering glass - like the Corelle plates that we demonstrate in the first year summer course - using the opposing stresses of the outside and inside glass to create phenomenal strength.

This video does some pretty stunning things with high-speed photography, showing the shockwave travelling down the tail of the drop to the head at over a mile a second.

The video explanation - using red-, white-, and blue-shirted versions of our host - is absolutely brilliant, doing a better job of showing the stresses than any other video that I've seen. Marvelous...stunning...

And, at 4:33, there's a tiny bit of type at the bottom of the screen that tells the actual amount of pressure involved in the Prince Rupert's drops.

Great, great, great video!

Why aren't they wearing gloves, though?

Here's a similar video from Theodore Grey's Popular Science column, Grey Matter.