Do drop-impact craters produce singular jets?
ORAL
Abstract
Drop-impact craters rebound and usually produce prominent Worthington jets. For a limited range of drop-impact Weber numbers, capillary waves travel down the crater surface and a dimple forms at the bottom of the crater. This dimple can pinch off and entrap a bubble into the pool, in a process call regular bubble entrapment. This bubble oscillates and emits sound. This parameter range is also associated with the appearance of high-speed fine jets. It has been suggested that the fastest jets are driven by a singularity in the surface curvature at the bottom of the dimple. Herein we use two ultra-high-speed video cameras to simultaneously image the jetting and the dimple evolution*. Our imaging at micro-second resolution never shows any curvature singularity at the bottom of the dimple. Furthermore, the fastest jets emerge when the inertial focusing drives the jet without pinch-off of a bubble. In contrast the bottom dimple air-cylinder is pushed up at high velocity when its diameter is of the order of 25 microns, producing jets which emerge at speeds as fast as 50 m/s.
*Thoroddsen et al., J. Fluid Mech., 848, R3 (2018).
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Presenters
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Sigurdur T. T Thoroddsen
King Abdullah Univ of Sci & Tech (KAUST), King Abdullah University of Science & Technology (KAUST), King Abdullah Univ of Sci & Tech (KAUST), Saudi Arabia, King Abdullah Univ of Sci & Tech (KAUST), King Abdullah Univ of Sci & Tech (KAUST), King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
Authors
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Sigurdur T. T Thoroddsen
King Abdullah Univ of Sci & Tech (KAUST), King Abdullah University of Science & Technology (KAUST), King Abdullah Univ of Sci & Tech (KAUST), Saudi Arabia, King Abdullah Univ of Sci & Tech (KAUST), King Abdullah Univ of Sci & Tech (KAUST), King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
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Kohsei Takehara
Kindai University, Osaka, Japan
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N. D. Nguyen
Hanoi University of Science and Technology, Hanoi, Vietnam
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T. G. Etoh
Kindai University, Osaka, Japan