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Video—Stop and Go Droplets

Physics 12, 80
Liquid droplets bouncing on a vibrating liquid surface can execute a surprising cycle, alternating between moving and standing still.
R. N. Valani et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. (2019)
Dancing drops. Bouncing droplets on a vibrating surface can execute a stop-and-go cycle. (See video below.)

Vibrating a container of silicone oil at about 80 Hz allows droplets of the liquid to bounce repeatedly on the surface and interact with the waves they generate. These interactions can propel the droplets across the surface, a phenomenon called walking. Now Rahil Valani and colleagues from Monash University in Australia have shown that applying two frequencies simultaneously leads to new and more complex movements, such as stop-and-go motion and transitions between a “crystal” and a “gas” of walkers. Such behavior is of interest in part because the particle-wave interaction mimics several quantum phenomena.

R. N. Valani et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. (2019)
With the liquid being shaken at both 80 Hz and 39.5 Hz, silicone oil droplets walk across the vibrating surface, then suddenly stop for a moment before regaining their stride.

In the stop-and-go case, the droplets alternate between stationary bouncing and random scurrying. To generate this behavior, the researchers set the vibration frequencies to 80 Hz and 39.5 Hz, so that the lower frequency is a bit less than half of the upper frequency. As a result, the phase difference between the two waves changes slowly over time and produces motion when it is within a certain range and stopping when outside that range. By tuning the lower frequency towards 40 Hz, the researchers could extend the time that the droplets spend in the stopped state.

This research is published in Physical Review Letters.

–David Ehrenstein

David Ehrenstein is a Senior Editor for Physics Magazine.


Subject Areas

Fluid Dynamics

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