Authors: Team Kohlrabi – Hannah DelGuercio, Peter Jakubczak, Sam Lippincott, Kenneth Olavarria
Team Plan: The plan for our “Team First” assignment is to use a seeded medium (smoke from a smoke machine in air) to photograph the turbulent airflow generated by the smoke machine itself. We plan on using a green laser as lighting to better visualize the flow patterns generated. We predict that the smoke generated will rapidly become turbulent after leaving the machine. This is likely due to the fact that the distances traveled by the smoke in the freestream air will be quite substantial, and cause it to trip to turbulence rather rapidly.
Setup: We shot a series of photographs in an unoccupied room in the engineering center. This room proved to be dark enough for us to effectively capture the interaction between the smoke and the laser. The smoke machine was placed perpendicular to a laser beam, and the laser beam was projected onto a black velvet tarp hung from a rail. This allowed enough contrast for us to see the laser interacting with the smoke machine.
Setup Photo:
Photo: The featured image is an edited photo I took with my Canon EOS Rebel T7. I made it black and white to reduce the intense green shine produced by the laser. Human eyes are also most sensitive to green wavelengths of light, so hopefully reducing all the green will allow us to see more details in the flow.
Report:
Settings:
Camera: Canon EOS Rebel T7
Lens: Canon EF-S 18-55mm Macro
Aperture: f/3.5
Exposure: 1/13
Focal length: 20mm
Focus distance: 0.67m
ISO: 6400
3 Comments. Leave new
Hi Kenneth
The final image looks stunning with the pure black background and the monochromatic smoke ring forming a cylinder with the glow from the lighting. I see the effort you put in for the visualization setup and the editing.
Nice work!
Really cool image – the smoke is so ethereal and it almost has the feel of the ocean abyss, like some alien deep-sea creature
I like the editing and the choice of color you chose for displaying the flow