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  • Yelta
    replied
    Originally posted by WhatEverBeansNecessary View Post
    And then you need to stir it to avoid drinking warm milk followed by straight espresso instead of a latte.... I don't know where you keep finding all these gems Yelta. I only hope it's not by trawling through cosmo each month
    G'Day WEBN, nope, don't trawl through Cosmos each month, however I do subscribe (it's a quarterly mag) and read it cover to cover.

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  • Yelta
    replied
    Evening Mal, I noted the similarity before posting, however started a new thread as the Cosmos piece was somewhat lighter and little easier to comprehend (to us non scientific types)

    Interesting Publication dates, perhaps Cosmos got hold of the Nature Communications paper prior to publication and decided to dumb it down.

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  • Javaphile
    replied
    Hhhhmmmmm....Perhaps that's why the threads were merged?


    Java "" phile

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  • Dimal
    replied
    ...

    The article I posted in the beginning is the origin of this story Yelta...

    Mal.

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  • WhatEverBeansNecessary
    replied
    And then you need to stir it to avoid drinking warm milk followed by straight espresso instead of a latte.... I don't know where you keep finding all these gems Yelta. I only hope it's not by trawling through cosmo each month

    Leave a comment:


  • Yelta
    replied
    The physics of coffee; interesting read.

    From Cosmos magazine.

    "If you pour coffee into warm milk at just the right speed, the laws of physics will make the two liquids arrange themselves into an elegant series of layers shading from white to dark brown, according to a new study that may have applications far beyond the barista’s realm."

    https://cosmosmagazine.com/physics/the-physics-of-coffee


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  • Dimal
    replied
    Indeed...

    I never expected RN to be mentioned in a coffee article, especially after studying Aeronautical Engineering many years ago and then of course, flow characteristics through pipework, etc...

    Just goes to show....

    Mal.

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  • CoffeeHack
    replied
    I'd always thought there wasn't enough discussion of Reynolds number when talking about coffee. And a Nature paper no less!

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  • Dimal
    replied
    Fun indeed mate...

    Mal.

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  • Javaphile
    replied
    Nice Mal!


    Java "Fun with science!" phile

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  • Dimal
    started a topic Caffeinated Physics...

    Caffeinated Physics...

    Coffee can have some very interesting physical characteristics...
    http://nature.com/articles/doi:10.10...67-017-01852-2

    Mal.
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