Tag Archives: kitchen oceanography
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24 Days of #KitchenOceanography — Visualizing streamlines
24 Days of #KitchenOceanography — Hydraulic jump in the sink
24 Days of #KitchenOceanography — Surface waves and internal waves
24 Days of #KitchenOceanography — Overflow experiment
24 Days of #KitchenOceanography — Melting ice cubes!
24 Days of #KitchenOceanography — Density-driven currents
24 Days of #KitchenOceanography — Oceanic overturning circulation
24 Days of #KitchenOceanography — Layers in the ocean
Destroying the diffusive layers in a latte in order to observe the insulating properties of milk foam
Have you ever noticed how, if you stir your latte*, when you pull out the spoon it’s piping hot, yet there is no steam rising from the latte itself? That’s because the milk foam on top is such a good thermal insulator thanks to all the tiny air bubbles trapped in it. Cool, isn’t it?
*I never noticed before today, when my friend Sara pointed it out, because I have NEVER before put a spoon in my latte. Because I am always observing double-diffusive mixing in my latte and would never do anything that might destroy the stratification. But this once it might have been worth it. The things we do for science… :-D
Do you love #kitchenoceanography, too?