FYFD

Celebrating the physics of all that flows. Ask a question, submit a post idea or send an email. You can also follow FYFD on Twitter and YouTube. FYFD is written by Nicole Sharp, PhD.


If you're a fan of FYFD and would like to help support the site and its outreach, please consider becoming a patron on Patreon or giving a donation through PayPal with the button below. Your support is much appreciated!


Recent Tweets @fyfluiddynamics

The dimensionless Reynolds number is a key concept in fluid dynamics, allowing scientists to distinguish regimes of flow between differing geometries and even different fluids. This video gives a great primer on the subject by examining the physics of swimming for a sperm versus a sperm whale. The Reynolds number is essentially a ratio between inertial forces (driven by velocity and size) and viscous forces, and its value can indicate how important different effects are. Sperm and other microbes live at very small Reynolds numbers, meaning that viscosity dominates as the force they must overcome to move. For more on the low Reynolds number world, check out how brine shrimp swim and what happens if a microbe tries to flap its tail. (Hint: it goes nowhere, and this is why.) (Video credit: A. Bhatia/TED Ed; via Jennifer Ouellette)

  1. waa-juu reblogged this from currentsinbiology
  2. badwolfteatime reblogged this from currentsinbiology
  3. bastianinienea reblogged this from currentsinbiology
  4. theboblow92 reblogged this from currentsinbiology
  5. startrekkeepsmealive reblogged this from currentsinbiology
  6. shuga-hill reblogged this from currentsinbiology
  7. xempressx reblogged this from currentsinbiology
  8. someonethatlovesy0u reblogged this from currentsinbiology
  9. yjmr reblogged this from currentsinbiology
  10. like5000sharks reblogged this from currentsinbiology
  11. mariachimushroom reblogged this from currentsinbiology
  12. fuckyeahfluiddynamics posted this