The Scientific Research Notes Of S. Sunkavally (years: 2002-2011).
2472-2472.
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The Scientific Research Notes Of S. Sunkavally (years: 2002-2011).
2472-2472.

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Charged Drops Don't Splash
When a droplet falls on a surface, it spreads itself horizontally into a thin lamella. Sometimes -- depending on factors like viscosity, impact speed, and air pressure -- that drop splashes, breaking up along its edge into myriad smaller droplets. But a new study finds that a small electrical charge is enough to suppress a drop's splash. (Image and research credit: F. Yu et al.; via APS News) Read the full article
Paris 2024: Clearing the Air
A quartet of mushroom-shaped structures tower nearly 6 meters above the Olympic Village. Known as Aerophiltres, these devices filter particulates out of the air to provide cleaner air for the Village, despite its proximity to major roadways. (Image credit: SOLIDEO/C. Badet; via DirectIndustry) Catch our past and ongoing Olympic coverage here. Read the full article
The ancient Greeks first recognized static electricity, but the mechanisms behind it remain somewhat mysterious. In particular, it's unclear how two pieces of the same material can build a charge between them simply by touching. Yet we regularly see examples of this when volcanic ash creates enough charge to discharge lightning. (Image credit: volcano - M. Szeglat, experiment - G. Grosjean and S. Waitukaitis; research credit: G. Grosjean and S. Waitukaitis; via APS Physics)

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Accretion disks form everywhere, from around young, planet-building stars to massive black holes. As matter circles in the disk, it slowly loses angular momentum and falls inward toward the central gravitational body. But the details of this process have long vexed astronomers. (Image credit: NASA; research credit: M. Vernet et al.; via Physics World)
Driven From Equilibrium
With the right application of force, liquids can take on shapes that defy our intuition. Here researchers sandwiched two immiscible oils between glass slides and applied an electric field. (Image, video, and research credit: G. Raju et al.; via Physics World) Read the full article
Many species of spider fly with a technique calling ballooning. We've touched on spider flight before, but more recent research adds a new dimension to the phenomenon. (Video and image credit: BBC; research credit: E. Morley and D. Robert)