This image represents a circular hydraulic jump produced by the impact of a 0.9 mm wide water jet on a Plexiglas disk. The flow rate is 2.1 mL/s. Credit: Physical Review Letters (2023). DOI: ...
In the 16th century, Leonardo da Vinci first described a fascinating phenomenon involving water that later became known as the hydraulic jump. And a mere five centuries later, scientists have finally ...
Scientists have provided new insights into how intense thunderstorms drive the injection of water vapor from the troposphere — the atmospheric layer closest to Earth’s surface — to the stratosphere.
A phenomenon that da Vinci had noticed but couldn’t explain took five centuries to be fully understood. In your kitchen, when you turn on the ...