A wind tunnel investigation of the shape of uncharged raindrops in the presence of an external, electric field
Abstract
Results of a wind tunnel experiment in which electrically uncharged water drops of 500 to 3000 microns equivalent radius are freely suspended in the vertical air stream of the UCLA cloud tunnel are presented. During this suspension the drops were exposed to external vertical electric fields of 500 to 8,000 volts/cm. The change in drop shape with drop size and electric field strength was noted and is discussed in the light of theoretical work cited in the literature which unfortunately does not take into account the effects of air flow past the drop. The wind tunnel study is documented by stills from a 16 mm film record that demonstrates the shape of water drops in response to both hydrodynamic and electric forces.
- Publication:
-
2d International Colloquium on Drops and Bubbles
- Pub Date:
- March 1982
- Bibcode:
- 1982drbu.coll..239P
- Keywords:
-
- Drop Size;
- Drops (Liquids);
- Electric Field Strength;
- Hydrodynamics;
- Shapes;
- Water;
- Air Flow;
- Amplitudes;
- Electric Fields;
- Oscillations;
- Photographs;
- Wind Tunnel Tests;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer