Spheropalooza

A couple of twitter posts showed up close together that wouldn’t seem to be related at first blush: earthquakes and water droplets in space. But they are, because they’re both showing vibrational effects on liquid spheres. The earth is more like a fluid on time scales longer than when you fall and take a tumble.

Here’s a normal mode animation, depicting the earth (and exaggerated by a factor of about a gazillion) showing the various ways it might ring after an earthquake

But as far as vibrational modes go, there’s nothing special about the earth. I know I’ve posted the Alka-Seltzer video, but this video has extra demonstrations and I can’t recall if I’ve linked to it as well

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The first bulk oscillation looks something like a (0,6,0) mode, or something close.

With the bubbles inside the drop, and droplets inside of that, it’s neat how the combining of droplets (~1:35) gives you more ringing; the total amount of energy in the surface tension goes down as the drop gets bigger — the volume increases faster than the surface area or, put another way, bigger spheres have less curvature per unit area, so they store less energy. That energy has to go somewhere , and that’s into a bulk vibration of the drop. There are a couple of instance of this effect in the video.

You're Wrong About One Thing

… that whole “That’s not funny” part

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Best. iPad Prank. Ever

Martinez gives a report on “piezo-electrics” — a phantom technology which electronically emits smell and taste from the screens of your iPad and iPhone. He coaxes his co-anchor to sniff and eventually lick (!) the screen of an iPad, only to find an “April Fools!” screen pop up shortly thereafter.

Piezoelectric technology is most definitely real; the “phantom” part is about letting you create smells and sounds. But what do you expect from a business site?

3-D Pong

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This is not human-piloted …

The vehicles/ball are tracked by an overhead motion capture system and controlled by a pair of computers.