Berks

Penn State Berks students present The Art and Science of Fluid Motion

The Splash of Milk Streams Impacting a Solid Surface, from the 70th annual meeting of the APS division of Fluid Dynamics.  Credit: Penn State. Creative Commons

Penn State Berks students enrolled in the college’s Flow Visualization course will present their work as part of a poster session from 12:15 to 1:15 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 5, in the lobby of the Gaige Technology and Business Innovation Building. Titled “The Art and Science of Fluid Motion,” the flow visualization gallery is intended to be a visual record of the aesthetic and science of contemporary fluid mechanics to be shared both with fellow researchers and the general public.

Flow visualization is the process of making the physics of fluid flows (gases, liquids) visible. In this course, students from all majors explore a range of techniques for creating images of fluid flows. Their work is motivated not just by the utility and importance of fluid flows, but also by their inherent beauty.

According to Azar Eslam Panah, assistant professor of mechanical engineering who teaches the course, “Flow visualization is for everyone: If you have paid attention to the patterns while stirring milk into coffee or stared at the curl of a rising tendril of smoke, you have participated in flow visualization. Art and science are similar in that they both thrive on deep seeing, on expanded perception and attention, which can be gained through simple experience.”

The Flow Visualization course is part of new Integrative Studies General Education, taught by Heidi Reuter, instructor in photography, and Azar Eslam Panah. This course reveals the techniques of making laboratory and everyday fluid flows visible for both scientific and aesthetic purposes. Questions such as "What makes an image scientific?" and "What makes an image art?" are explored. Eslam Pananah and Reuter are the winners of last year’s Gallery of Fluid Motion Award at 70th annual meeting of the APS Division of Fluid Dynamics in Denver, Colorado.

In March 2017, Penn State Berks unveiled its new Fluid Discovery Lab, the newest state-of-the-art engineering laboratory in the Gaige Technology and Business Innovation Building and the only open access laboratory dedicated to the study of fluid dynamics in the Penn State system. Designed and constructed under the guidance of Panah, the lab provides an opportunity for students to conduct undergraduate research and perform experiments, reinforcing classroom theory through practical application in fluid dynamics. Panah’s research focuses on the physics of flows using a range of experimental techniques that can be extrapolated into engineering applications. Her research interests include unsteady aerodynamics of biologically inspired air and underwater vehicles and fluid dynamics in human bodies.

For more information about the course or presentation, email Panah at aue10@psu.edu or Heidi Reuter at her12@psu.edu.

 

Last Updated November 20, 2018