2012 Video Gallery
2012 Press Releases
2012 Meeting Information
APS DFD Virtual Press Room Archive
The Division of Fluid Dynamics exists for the advancement and diffusion of knowledge of the physics of fluids with special emphasis on the dynamical theories of the liquid, plastic and gaseous states of matter under all conditions of temperature and pressure. Every year, the APS Division of Fluid Dynamics hosts a physical Gallery of Fluid Motion at its annual meeting — a room where stunning graphics and videos from computational or experimental studies showing flow phenomena are displayed.
A panel of referees selects the most outstanding entries based on artistic content, originality, and their ability to convey information. The 65th Annual Meeting Image Gallery archives a subset of these images and videos on the APS DFD website. Outstanding entries are honored during the Meeting, placed on display at the Annual APS 2013 March Meeting, and published in the annual "Gallery of Fluid Motion" in the September 2013 issue of the American Institute of Physics' journal, Physics of Fluids. Past winners are also published in the Physics of Fluids.
Physics of Fluids
In conjunction with the 65th Annual Meeting of the American Physical Society (APS) Division of Fluid Dynamics (November 18-20, 2012, San Diego, California), a subset of these images and videos is archived on the APS DFD website.
APS DFD Virtual Press Room Archives
Reporters seeking permission to use these images or author contact information should email Charles Blue. Please leave "DFD Gallery of Fluid Motion" in the subject line.
A jet of dyed water (white) rinses a diluted solution of polyacrylamide (PAM) (blue) off of a surface.
Inspired by children clapping their wet hands, the authors of this snapshot capture the smooth sheet of liquid created by the rapid compression of two plates, shortly before that sheet breaks down due to instabilities.
Vertical vibrations to a fluid in a container create standing waves that alternate in appearance between a pentagon and a five-pointed star.
A coiling stream of honey stretches and deforms as it traverses the water in a crystal goblet.
Scientists use water sheets to create a new, simple water feature for yard displays.
The orange in these images depicts the vortices created by water flowing over a circular cylinder with two step changes in diameter.
This snapshot from a high-fidelity simulation shows what happens moments after a head-on collision between two water droplets.
Convection patterns appear when a fluid that responds to magnetization is placed in a magnetic field and is heated from one side.
The interaction of a pair of wavy, counter-rotating vortices with a wall, and the subsequent generation of secondary vorticity, are shown in these images at two different times during their evolution.
This multiple-exposure photograph shows a single bubble ring rising to the top of a water tank.
In this composite image, the tracks of fluorescent beads reveal the complex cilia-driven flow between Pocillopora damicornis coral polyps.