Modeling bursting bubble dynamics
DOI: 10.1063/PT.4.2465
Bubbles of soap and other liquids have long been known to adopt the shape that minimizes their surface area. An isolated bubble is a sphere; bubbles in a foam or cluster meet so that their surfaces form 120° angles at junctions. But that equilibrium picture is far from a complete description of a foam, an inherently nonequilibrium system. Under pressure gradients and gravity, fluid drains from the liquid films that constitute the bubble walls. When one of the films gets too thin, it ruptures. The remaining bubbles are left to rearrange into a new configuration, and the cycle begins again. Each of the processes affects the others, but they occur on such different length and time scales that recreating them all in a single numerical simulation has been computationally prohibitive. Now mathematicians Robert Saye
More about the authors
Johanna L. Miller, jmiller@aip.org