This is a video of a top to a frosting container and a pepper shaker being dropped into a cornstarch and water mixture. The video was then put in slow motion to observe the interesting physics that this liquid displays.
Team Third- AJ Corne
Categories
Search for content or authors
Flow Vis Guidebook
- Introduction to the Guidebook
- Overview 1: Phenomena. Why Does It Look Like That?
- Overview 2: Visualization Techniques
- Overview 3: Lighting
- Overview 4 - Photography A: Composition and Studio Workflow
- Overview 4 - Photography B: Cameras
- Overview 4 - Photography C: Lenses - Focal Length
- Overview 4 - Photography C: Lenses - Aperture and DOF
- Overview 4: Photography D: Exposure
- Overview 4 - Photography E - Resolution
- Overview 5 - Post-Processing
- Clouds 1: Names
- Clouds 2: Why Are There Clouds? Lift Mechanism 1: Instability
- Clouds 3: Skew - T and Instability
- Clouds 4: Clouds in Unstable Atmosphere
- Clouds 5: Lift Mechanism 2 - Orographics
- Clouds 6: Lift Mechanism 3 - Weather Systems
- Boundary Techniques - Introduction
- Dye Techniques 1 - Do Not Disturb
- Dye Techniques 2 - High Visibility
- Dye Techniques 3 - Light Emitting Fluids
- Refractive Index Techniques 1: Liquid Surfaces
- Refractive Index Techniques 2: Shadowgraphy and Schlieren
- Particle Physics: Flow and Light
- Particles 2: Aerosols
- Particles 3: In Water - Under Construction
- Art and Science
- TOC and Zotpress test
- Photons, Wavelength and Color
5 Comments. Leave new
Great video AJ, reminds me of playing with Oobleck in highschool.
AJ, I think that the choice to slow this video down was a great decision for the flow and artistic reasoning. I also really appreciate how you changed the density of your fluid to make the phenomena more interesting.
Hi AJ!
You did a great job capturing the resulting jets from the object hitting the surface of the mixture. As mentioned in critique, I think it would’ve been great to add a background (maybe a colored poster board?) to help differentiate the flow from the table. Otherwise this is a great experiment, I alway love seeing different oobleck set ups!
This is a very simple yet effective showcase of fluid physics and the way you captured it shows the effect you were trying to convey
I really like the simple approach to this image. The crown feature is really cool to see.