Free Oscillations and Surfactant Studies of Superdeformed Drops in Microgravity
- 10 March 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review Letters
- Vol. 78 (10) , 1912-1915
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevlett.78.1912
Abstract
An unprecedented microgravity observation of maximal shape oscillations of a surfactant-bearing water drop the size of a ping-pong ball was observed during a mission of Space Shuttle Columbia. The goal of the research, of which this observation is a part, was to study the rheological properties of liquid drop surfaces on which are adsorbed surfactant molecules under conditions not possible at 1g. Numerical computation of the evolution of the shape of greatly deformed drops using the boundary integral method has successfully predicted the observed drop shapes over a complete cycle of oscillation, thereby permitting the calculation of the dynamic surface tension under these unique conditions.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Investigations of liquid surface rheology of surfactant solutions by droplet shape oscillations: TheoryPhysics of Fluids, 1995
- Nonlinear oscillations of viscous liquid dropsJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1992
- Shape oscillations of drops in the presence of surfactantsJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1991
- Collective flow and pion production in a hydrodynamic modelPhysical Review C, 1988
- Quadratic resonance in the three-dimensional oscillations of inviscid drops with surface tensionPhysics of Fluids, 1986
- Dynamic fission instabilities in rapidly rotating N = 3/2 polytropes - A comparison of results from finite-difference and smoothed particle hydrodynamics codesThe Astrophysical Journal, 1986
- Ultrasonically stimulated low-frequency oscillation and breakup of immiscible liquid drops: PhotographsPhysics of Fluids, 1985
- Free oscillations of drops and bubbles: the initial-value problemJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1980
- Relativistic Hydrodynamic Theory of Heavy-Ion CollisionsPhysical Review Letters, 1975
- VI. On the capillary phenomena of jetsProceedings of the Royal Society of London, 1879