@TheBusayu I couldn't get it to bounce with water. The surface tension of water is much higher than the surface tension of the oils used here. This led to imperfections in the film of air growing large before they were carried away by the motion of the bath and jet. I would encourage you try with oil first. Once you get the hang of it with oil, then try water. The link above gives tips on doing this at home. My papers and reports have more detailed information on how to do it at home.
@themrfj The Kaye effect needs a non-Newtonian liquid for its mechanism to work, as the lubrication layer is a thin layer of shear-thinned liquid. The bouncing jet in the video doesn't. It works with a Newtonian liquid, as the lubrication layer is air.
Rayleigh did a "similar thing" on the stability of newly formed jets. The surface tension can be found as a function of the time constant of the repeating motion as I recall. See his Collected Papers.
I AM BORD -.-
dgkway 3 months ago
Whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat?
gag75 7 months ago
ahh ok. this can be a demo for our school's science exhibit :) thanks
TheBusayu 7 months ago
does this work with water?
TheBusayu 7 months ago
@TheBusayu I couldn't get it to bounce with water. The surface tension of water is much higher than the surface tension of the oils used here. This led to imperfections in the film of air growing large before they were carried away by the motion of the bath and jet. I would encourage you try with oil first. Once you get the hang of it with oil, then try water. The link above gives tips on doing this at home. My papers and reports have more detailed information on how to do it at home.
MatthewThrasher 7 months ago 3
i thought it was: non-newtonian fluid?
themrfj 2 years ago
@themrfj The Kaye effect needs a non-Newtonian liquid for its mechanism to work, as the lubrication layer is a thin layer of shear-thinned liquid. The bouncing jet in the video doesn't. It works with a Newtonian liquid, as the lubrication layer is air.
MatthewThrasher 7 months ago
@MatthewThrasher Two year old comment. But thanks for responding ;)
themrfj 7 months ago
I don't understand this T_T, what the heck is this?¿? dont tell me xD
kamihakai 4 years ago
Rayleigh did a "similar thing" on the stability of newly formed jets. The surface tension can be found as a function of the time constant of the repeating motion as I recall. See his Collected Papers.
The surface tension is the restoring force.
Archibald
honestjohnnfld 4 years ago
For some reason I think Holst's Mars, the Bringer of War would be an even better soundtrack.
metamaterial 4 years ago