| Using odds and ends from the space
              station pantry, researchers have learned something new about fluid
              physics.
 by Dr Tony Phillips 
              
              Try this: In your kitchen at home, squirt
              a stream of warm honey into a cup of water or tea, and watch what
              happens. Sweet gooey rivulets, falling downward, twist themselves
              into curly-cues, filaments, and spinning "smoke rings." It's mesmerizing.
              But only for a split-second, then the honey splats into the bottom
              of the cup. Gravity is such a brute. What you need is a
              kitchen in space. Without gravity dragging everything down, spinning
              rings of honey in water could hang suspended for hours. Honey-ribbons
              would have more time to twist and turn, developing into … no one
              knows what. "How fluids mix in
              weightlessness is not well understood," explains chemistry professor
              John Pojman of the University of Southern Mississippi. Here on Earth,
              he says, the physics is dominated by gravity. Dense fluids sink
              and light fluids rise; everything else is a side effect of that
              basic motion. In space, the pull
              of gravity subsides and other, more subtle phenomena rule. Intermolecular
              forces can hold films or globs of fluid together that, on Earth,
              would be torn apart by their own weight. These delicate structures
              can last for a long time, simply because they float rather than
              crash into the floor of their container. 
                That's not to say weightless
              fluids are still. On the contrary, in a container holding two different
              fluids, like honey and water, scientists expect strange and complicated
              currents to flow. "Tiny differences in fluid composition or temperature
              can, in theory, induce stresses that cause convection," explains
              Pojman. This effect, called "Korteweg stress," is unobservable on
              Earth because buoyant motions overwhelm it. But in space it could
              be important.
                  | 
   
  Honey and water in the author's kitchen. 
 | 
 How different is teatime
              in orbit? Astronaut Don Pettit showed us in 2003 when he filmed
              himself taking tea onboard the International Space Station (ISS).
              Instead of sipping from a cup, Pettit used chopsticks to pluck grape-sized
              blobs of tea from mid-air, grinning each time he popped one in his
              mouth. Pojman remembers seeing the film. "I wanted to fly right
              up there and start experimenting," he says.  Understanding how fluids
              behave, singly or in mixtures, is important to the space program,
              especially now that NASA plans to send people back to the Moon and
              on to Mars.  "We're going to have
              to manufacture things in space," explains Pojman, "and that means
              dealing with fluids." As an example, he offers plastics - a key component
              of habitats, radiation shields, rovers, etc. Plastics are usually
              formed by combining dissimilar fluids or fluids and powders, then
              heating the mixture. "If you've ever used BondoTM to
              repair your car, you've done this yourself: you mix a resin together
              with peroxide to create a sticky plastic substance," adds Pojman.
               Mixing is also necessary
              for certain types of medical space-research - "especially protein
              crystal growth in microgravity," notes Pojman. When two fluids are
              put together, do "Korteweg currents" flow? Do the fluids dissolve
              evenly? Do they break apart into droplets? These details actually
              make a difference. Pojman himself couldn't
              go to the ISS to investigate such questions, so he devised an experiment
              that astronauts could do for him: the Miscible Fluids in Microgravity
              Experiment or MFMG for short. "MFMG is a very simple experiment,"
              he says. "It involves two syringes, a drinking straw, honey and
              water. All of these things were already onboard the ISS." One syringe is filled
              with honey or a honey-water solution, the other with pure water.
              The tips of the syringes are connected via a short tube (the straw).
              When all is ready, an astronaut gently squirts a blob of honey into
              the water, or vice versa, and films what happens. ISS science officer
              Mike Foale did the experiment last week, and transmitted the video
              to Earth. "We've already learned
              something new," says Pojman. 
              
                
                  | 
   Image credit: NASA
  Honey
                        injected into water during the MFMG experiment onboard
                        the International Space Station, March 2003. 
 |  There's a number in
              fluid physics theory called "the square gradient parameter" or k.
              It's proportional to the strength of intermolecular forces between
              two different fluids, like honey and water. "How two fluids behave
              when mixed in low-gravity is going to depend on k," says
              Pojman. "We've never been able to measure k on Earth for
              a pair of miscible (mixable) fluids. It's value could be anything!
              But just from watching the video of MFMG we've got an upper limit
              on k - it must be less than 10-8 Newtons." He reached this conclusion
              in the following way: If k were much greater than 10-8 Newtons, honey blobs injected into
              water would quickly assume a spherical shape. But they didn't. The
              blobs, squeezed into elongated shapes as they passed through the
              nozzle of the syringe, remained elongated.  "The fact that we could
              do this using only odds and ends onboard the space station is encouraging,"
              says Pojman. A similar procedure could be used to set limits on,
              or actually measure, k for many different pairs of fluids.
               Some fluids are more
              important than others. Pojman is most interested in monomers and
              polymers that might be used in space manufacturing. Such fluids
              are simpler, internally, than honey, so they might lend themselves
              to "cleaner" measurements of fluid physics constants. It's unlikely, though,
              than any of those other fluids will be as much fun, or mesmerizing,
              as honey. Who knows what new physics lies in its sweet spinning
              "smoke rings" or gooey dancing ribbons? It's something to think
              about the next time you're relaxing with a cup of tea … and you
              reach for the honey. Author's
              note: The kitchen-science
              experiment described in the opening passages of this story is best
              done using a "honey bear" - a plastic honey-filled bear with a nozzle
              on top, available in most supermarkets - microwaved for about 30
              seconds. The warmed honey flows easily through the nozzle with a
              viscosity only a little greater than water. Squirt the honey, gently,
              into a transparent cup filled with cool tap water. You'll soon see
              rings and a variety of other weird shapes.   
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