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High-speed imaging unveils fluid mysteries

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Compiled by Photonics Spectra staff

Tibetan singing bowls have been used in religious ceremonies to produce rich, beautiful sounds. Now physicists are filling them with water and using them to quantify how droplets are propelled from the water’s surface as the bowls are excited. Generally composed from a bronze alloy containing nickel, tin, copper, zinc, iron, silver and gold, Tibetan singing bowls are a type of standing bell. They produce complex sounds when their rims are struck or rubbed with a leather-wrapped or wooden mallet – much like the sound that floats out of a wine glass when the edge is rubbed, and...Read full article

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    Published: September 2011
    Benjamin Franklin glass harmonicacamerasdroplet generationEnglandEuropefuel injectionImagingliquid interaction with solid materialsMITperfume spraysPhantom high speed video cameraResearch & TechnologyTech PulseTibetan singing bowlUniversite de LiegeVision Researchwater droplet ejectionwind-loadingwind-loading of bridgeswind-loading of buildings

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