- Splash (fluid mechanics)
In
fluid mechanics , a splash is a sudden disturbance to the otherwise quiescentfree surface of a liquid (usuallywater ). The disturbance is typically caused by a solid object suddenly hitting the surface, although splashes can occur in which moving liquid supplies the energy. This use of the word is onomatopoeic.Splashes are characterized by transient ballistic flow, and are governed by the
Reynolds number and theWeber number .Small scale splashes in which a droplet of liquid hits a free surface can produce symmetric forms that resemble a
coronet ;milk is often used as it is opaque.Sand is said to splash if hit sufficiently hard (seedry quicksand ) and sometimes the impact of ameteorite is referred to as splashing, if small bits of ejecta are formed.Physicist
Lei Xu and coworkers at theUniversity of Chicago discovered that the splash due to the impact of a small drop ofethanol onto a dry solid surface could be suppressed by reducing the pressure below a specific threshold. For drops of diameter 3.4 mm falling throughair , this pressure was about 20kilopascal s, or 0.2 atmosphere.ee also
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Harold Eugene Edgerton , whose "Milkdrop Coronet" is arguably the most famous photograph of a splashReferences
Lei Xu et al, "drop splashing on a dry smooth surface", Phys. Rev. Letts.(2005)
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