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A group of fluid mechanics and physics researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have created the perfect pour-over ...
As you read this sentence, trillions of cells are moving around in your body. From the red blood cells being pumped by your ...
We often imagine sperm as swimmers, tiny cells whipping their tails to power through fluid on a mission toward the egg.
In the Arnold Mathijssen Lab at the Univeristy of Pennsylvania, researchers used a gooseneck kettle, coffee grinder, and a pour-over setup alongside precise measurements and high-speed analysis to ...
Monash researchers have discovered that swimming sperm create swirling fluid vortices—shaped like rolling corkscrews—giving ...
Research teams have established a theoretical method for designing smooth curved wall surfaces with variable cross-section ...
Though visually similar to turbulence, “The Starry Night” lacks the scientific elements needed to support that claim.
A Monash University study reveals that sperm generate corkscrew-shaped fluid vortices that enhance their forward motion. The ...
Utilizing numerical simulations, researchers have succeeded in recreating the fluid dynamics of flowing cells like blood or ...