Water entry of spheres into a rotating liquid
ORAL
Abstract
The transient cavity dynamics during water entry of a heavy, non-rotating sphere impacting a rotating pool of liquid is studied experimentally, numerically and theoretically. We show that the pool rotation advances the transition of the cavity type – from deep seal to surface seal – marked by a reduction in the transitional Froude number. The role of the dimensionless rotational number $\mathcal{S} = \omega R_0/U_0$ on the transient cavity dynamics is unveiled, where $R_0$ is the sphere radius, $\omega$ the angular speed of the liquid and $U_0$ the impact velocity. The rotating background liquid has two discernible effects on the cavity evolution. Firstly, an increase in the underwater pressure field due to centripetal effects; and secondly, a reduction in the pressure of airflow in the cavity neck near the water surface. The non-dimensional pinch-off time of the deep seal shows a robust 1/2 power-law dependence on the Froude number, but with a reducing prefactor for increasing $\omega$. Our findings reveal that the effects of a rotating background liquid on the water entry can be traced back to the subtle differences in the initial stage splash and the near-surface cavity dynamics.
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Presenters
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Varghese Mathai
- Department of Physics, University of Massachusetts Amherst
- University of Massachusetts Amherst
- UMass Amherst
- Department of Physics, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
- University of Massachusetts, Amherst