Clinking your glass of beer often leaves its contents sloshing back and forth. Soon, though, the motion stops, your drink settles, and you can sip without getting foam on your nose. The foam helps ...
When commuters rush out the door with coffee in hand, chances are their hastiness causes some of the hot liquid to slosh out of the cup. In a new paper, authors use surprisingly simple mathematics to ...
Lloyd's Register, the world leader in the classification of LNG carriers, has published a new guidance document for the design of membrane-technology liquid natural gas containment systems. The ...
In this week's Science for All newsletter, Divya Gandhi explains how scientists use biomimicry to create no-spill cups ...
Coffee simply does not like to stay in place. Restaurant servers soon learn to pour coffee at the table or to carry the poured cup and saucer separately, lest they wind up with a half-empty coffee cup ...
The foam on the top of beer keeps it from sloshing out of its glass — and that could be why coffee gets spilt so much more often, and why getting lattes might fix that problem. Scientists, who noticed ...
LNG sloshing on ABS testbed Class society ABS and South Korea’s Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering (DSME) are closing in on completion of a one-year study examining critical wave conditions for ...