Single and Double Slit Experiments for Walking Droplets in the Supercritical Faraday Regime
ORAL
Abstract
The interaction of 'walking droplets' and capillary waves in a weakly subcritical Faraday wave experiment has been studied as a hydrodynamic analog to Bohmian quantum mechanics (see "Hydrodynamic Quantum Analogs", J. Bush and A. Oza, Rep. Prog. Physics (2021)). We report here experimental results of walking droplets interacting with supercritical Faraday waves with a driving frequency of 60 Hz, which corresponds to a driving frequency of ε = 0.11 in flat bath topography. Our working fluid is silicone oil with a kinematic viscosity of 20 cst that is placed as a 4.2 mm horizontal liquid layer in an intermediate-aspect-ratio circular bath with a radius to Faraday wavelength ratio of Γ = 5.8. We also use different 3D-printed subsurfaces that act as slit structures with local oil depth of 0.7 mm. We confirm expected behavior for walking droplets in the supercritical Faraday regime, such as erratic trajectories, droplets clustering together due to capillary effects, and spontaneous drop creation. We discuss the influence of the lateral boundaries and slits on droplet trajectory in this chaotic regime and compare the measured trajectories to single and double slit experiments in the subcritical Faraday regime.
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Presenters
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Emily Dunn
Duke University
Authors
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Emily Dunn
Duke University
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Bavand Keshavarz
Duke University
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Earl Dowell
Duke University