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The Physics of Beer Bubbles

Roland Piquepaille writes "Yesterday, I told you about virtual beer. Today, we follow two North America researchers who are studying the physics of real beer bubbles. 'Singly scattered waves form the basis of many imaging techniques such as radar or seismic exploration.' But pouring beer in a mug involves multiply scattered acoustic waves. They are more complex to study, but they can be used to look at various phenomena, such as predicting volcanic eruptions or understanding the movement of particles in fluids like beer. They also could be used to monitor the structural health of bridges and buildings or the stability of food products over time. Read more for additional references and a photo showing how the researchers monitor beer bubbles."

3 of 113 comments (clear)

  1. ZDNet gave Roland a blog?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    They must be desperate... And that photo? Hilarious! Anyway, where's the real news like the unmasking of Fake Steve Jobs?

  2. Screw Roland by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Got Greasemonkey? Don't want to see Roland 'Slashdotters-are-my-ad-view-bitches' Piquepaille's stories?

    Screw Roland Piquepaille

  3. Oblig by nascarguy27 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Can beer bubbles run Linux?
    Can beer bubbles make Duke Nukem Forever?
    How 'bout a Beowulf Cluster of beer bubbles?

    --
    Funny createSig(Witty remark, Odd reference)
    {
    return (Funny)remark + (Funny)reference;
    }