Levitating Liquids And Upside Down Floating Boats? Science Makes It All Possible!

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ESPCI researchers floated a toy boat on the underside of a suspended liquid (Credit: at Benjamin Apffel et al., Nature)

Suspended liquids and inverted floating boats may seem like something straight out of a Harry Potter novel. However, as a team of scientists at the ESPCI in Paris, France, recently demonstrated, the gravity-defying feats do not require magical spells — just the knowledge of some basic laws of physics!

“We were playing with the experiment,” says ESPCI professor Emmanuel Fort. “We had this liquid layer and some beads, and we were surprised to see the beads floating on the lower interface. At first, it was not meant to be applied to anything practical, we were just amazed by the system and how counter-intuitive it was.”

The team began by placing a plexiglass container filled with a thick, heavy liquid, like glycerol, on a machine that was set to vibrate at 100 cycles per second. The high viscosity fluid was chosen because the vibrations would cause runny liquids, like water, to ripple or "slosh" around, making it impossible to form a stable, levitated layer. The researchers then injected air bubbles into the liquid, which were pushed down by the rapid vibrations to form a dense layer below the liquid. The trapped cushion of air allowed the liquid to stay suspended, instead of dripping to the bottom.

The toy boat remains suspended due to two opposing forces (Credit: Benjamin Apffel et al., Nature)

Once the liquid was suspended, the scientists carefully inserted small objects, including beads, tiny boats, and rubber ducks, on the underside. To their surprise, instead of dropping to the bottom of the container, the objects moved to a partially submerged position underneath the suspended fluid and began floating upside down. The French team, who published their findings in Nature on September 2, 2020, say that the seemingly magical feat can be explained by science. The layer of air trapped under the dense, levitating liquid pushes the objects up into the liquid, while gravity keeps trying to pull it down. The delicate balance between these two forces allows the boat and other objects to float upside down.

The scientists next plan to attempt suspending two types of fluids in the same container and explore if the experiment works when the amount of fluid or size of floating objects is altered. Fort believes the latter is very possible. The researcher told Newscientist, “There is no size limit as long as the liquid is viscous enough, so if you wanted to swim on the bottom of a levitating liquid layer you would be swimming through something more viscous like honey, which would be entertaining to watch."

Resources: Nature.com, Newscientist.com, Phys.com
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188 Comments
  • birbgirl
    birbgirlabout 4 years
    Imagine people make it the size of a swimming pool and let people swim in levitating water!
    • heyheygirl
      heyheygirlabout 4 years
      #EpicScience
      • theoriginal1
        theoriginal1about 4 years
        humans have a WAYYYY higher density than those boats. I'm sorry to ruin your dream but that's scientifically and mathematically impossible.
      • justsara
        justsaraabout 4 years
        Harry Potter is amazing! lol
        • adobekid
          adobekidabout 4 years
          I LOVE the Harry Potter books! I would love to go to Hogwarts! #booklover
          • purrsgrowlsnarl
            purrsgrowlsnarlabout 4 years
            Guess what! Jogwarts is real. I met marry potter and don weasly and remoine granger! THey r so cool. THen i got girl scout cookies and rutter beer.
            • adobekid
              adobekidabout 4 years
              That's awesome!! You met Harry potter, Ron weasly and Hermione granger!!!
          • danabywo-159974811707
            THAT'S AWESOME i mean it's affected by gravity
            • quinne56
              quinne56about 4 years
              it is so cool i love it
              • 11008800
                11008800about 4 years
                THAT IS SO COOL. It's not affected by gravity.
                • sparf08
                  sparf08about 4 years
                  didn´t we use sound waves to make matter float? Apparently, the answer to levitation is vibration. Acoustic levitators make it so you can make water float freely.
                • destroyerman212
                  destroyerman212about 4 years
                  Impressive.
                  • alpha543
                    alpha543about 4 years
                    This is very cool and insane I just never thought we would figure how to make thing suspended in liquids like this.
                    • superdogthe1st
                      superdogthe1stabout 4 years
                      When are we gonna have floating full sized boats