123ArticleOnline Logo
Welcome to 123ArticleOnline.com!
ALL >> Technology,-Gadget-and-Science >> View Article

A Spring Called: Drop Of Water

Profile Picture
By Author: K.A.Cassimally
Total Articles: 13
Comment this article
Facebook ShareTwitter ShareGoogle+ ShareTwitter Share

Do you know what happens when a drop of water hits a non-absorbent surface? Yeah you're right (if you don't have the answer, please re-read the title of this column), the drop bounces upwards.

A French scientific team from the Collēge de France have studied the scene carefully with a camera that took 40000 images per second. Here are the results:
At first, when it hits the surface, the drop flattens. Then, it bounces up due to the movement energy it had when falling down. The drop will continue going upwards eventually taking the shape of a needle. Afterwards, the drop falls upon itself, into itself. It thus takes the shape of a pancake (again) but this time, the drop is in midair.

This phenomenon is different to a drop falling on other surfaces as in this case, the drop crashes on the surface leaving only a small quantity of the water to bounce up.
Physicists have also found out that the actual speed of a drop influences its deformation but not the time taken for it to get in contact with the surface. This actually depends upon the mass of the drop.

Anyway why is all this stuff ...
... important anyway? Scientists believe that this find may be of interest to the industry. There's a small illustration:
Imagine not seeing droplets of rain on your car's windscreen when it is in fact raining cats and dogs outside. Cool, isn't it? Well this may well be possible with these new data obtained by the scientists from the Collēge de France. How though? Easy enough! The period of contact of the raindrops with the windscreen is so minimal that the driver does not even see them!

Water drops bounces like springs, would you ever have thought of this? No, I'm not sure you would.

About the Author K.A.Cassimally is the editor in chief of Astronomy Journal and Astronomy Journal Ezine. He is also the co-founder of the RCPL Astronomy Club. K.A.Cassimally is best known for his article 'Harry Potter and the Moons of Jupiter'.
He is also Senior Columnist at BackWash.com where he writes 'Not Scientific Science'.
Website: http://www.rcplastronomyclub.zik.mu
:http://www.backwash.com/content.php?id=358
Email: kcassimally@rcplastronomyclub.zik.mu

Total Views: 204Word Count: 349See All articles From Author

Add Comment

Technology, Gadget and Science Articles

1. Understanding 409 Conflict Error And How To Resolve It
Author: VPS9

2. Top 7 Best Data Center Cooling Tips
Author: adlerconway

3. Building A Digital Fortress: Why Cybersecurity Is The Foundation Of Modern Innovation
Author: Dominic Coco

4. Extracting Used Car Listings Data In Tokyo & Osaka For Insight
Author: Web Data Crawler

5. Japan Car Price Data Scraping For Automotive Price Trends
Author: Web Data Crawler

6. Easter Gift Basket Data Analytics From Amazon
Author: Actowiz Metrics

7. Scrape Easter Basket Ideas Data For Cpg For Seasonal Trends
Author: Food Data Scraper

8. Scrape Flipkart Flight Booking Data For Competitive Insights
Author: Retail Scrape

9. Benefits Of Web Scraping For Property Builders In New Zealand
Author: REAL DATA API

10. Scrape Sku-level Grocery Sales Data From Singapore Retailers
Author: Food Data Scraper

11. Oman Is Quietly Building Its Case As A Middle East Data Center Hub
Author: Arun kumar

12. Ai Web Scraping Trends In 2026 | Real-time Data & Api Solutions
Author: REAL DATA API

13. Liquid Cooling Is Becoming The Backbone Of Modern Data Centers
Author: Arun kumar

14. Web Scraping Data For Automotive Market Intelligence In Japan
Author: Web Data Crawler

15. Easter 2026 Flavor Contrast Trends Data Scraping To Win Shelf Space
Author: Food Data Scraper

Login To Account
Login Email:
Password:
Forgot Password?
New User?
Sign Up Newsletter
Email Address: