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Kelvin Waves

All articles tagged with #kelvin waves

Ultra-soft Solids Bridge Kelvin and Rayleigh Waves, Enabling Soft Diagnostics
science24 days ago

Ultra-soft Solids Bridge Kelvin and Rayleigh Waves, Enabling Soft Diagnostics

Harvard researchers report that ultra-soft solids like gels and biological tissue can support wake-like waves that interpolate between the classical Kelvin patterns in liquids and Rayleigh waves in solids, revealing a direct link between wave dynamics and material softness; this could enable non-invasive “soft diagnostics” to assess tissue stiffness and potentially detect tumors.

Revolutionary Insights into Quantum Turbulence Unveiled.
science-and-technology3 years ago

Revolutionary Insights into Quantum Turbulence Unveiled.

Researchers from Lancaster University and Aalto University have demonstrated the dissipation of energy in quantum turbulence, providing insights into turbulence across various scales. The team's findings demonstrate a new understanding of how wave-like motion transfers energy from macroscopic to microscopic length scales, and their results confirm a theoretical prediction about how the energy is dissipated at small scales. The discovery could become a cornerstone of the physics of large quantum systems and could lead to improved engineering in domains where the flow and behaviour of fluids and gases like water and air is a key question.

Exploring Quantum Turbulence from the Basics
physics3 years ago

Exploring Quantum Turbulence from the Basics

Researchers at Aalto University have studied turbulence in the Helium-3 isotope in a unique, rotating ultra-low temperature refrigerator and found that Kelvin waves act on individual vortices by continually pushing energy to smaller and smaller scales, ultimately leading to the scale at which dissipation of energy takes place. This new understanding of how wave-like motion transfers energy from macroscopic to microscopic length scales could lead to improved engineering in domains where the flow and behavior of fluids and gases like water and air is a key question.