The Asian Age

Science behind blowing soap bubbles decoded

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New York, Sept. 2: Researcher­s have decoded the science behind the popular childhood activity of blowing soap bubbles — a finding that may help improve products like sprays and foams.

In a series of experiment­s replicatin­g bubble blowing, researcher­s at New York University ( NYU) discovered two ways in which bubbles can be made: one, by pushing with a steady but strong wind on a soap film through a circular wand, which causes it to grow into a bubble, and two, by pushing with a gentle wind on an already- inflated film in order to drive its further growth.

“This second method might explain how we often blow bubbles as kids: a quick puff bends the film outward and thereafter the film keeps growing even as the flow of air slows,” said Leif Ristroph, assistant professor at NYU, who led the study.

“This is used by the bubble blowers we see in parks in the summertime,” said Ristroph.

“They simply walk, sufficient­ly fast, it seems,

As a physics problem, blowing bubbles is a question of how a liquid film interacts with an imposed flow of an external fluid, which is air in the case of bubble blowing

with a soapy loop of rope, which provides the relative wind needed to stretch out the film,” he said.

The results, published in the journal Physical Review Letters, point to potential applicatio­ns in consumer products that contain bubbles or droplets, such as sprays, foams, and emulsions, which are combinatio­ns of unmixable liquids.

As a physics problem, blowing bubbles is a question of how a liquid film — typically soapy water — interacts with an imposed flow of an external fluid, which is air in the case of bubble blowing.

The findings give a precise recipe or set of instructio­ns for how to blow bubbles.

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