Effect of ambient gas on cavity formation for sphere impacts on liquids
Hollis Williams, James Sprittles, Juan C. Padrino, Petr Denissenko

TL;DR
This study investigates how the density of surrounding gas affects cavity formation during sphere impacts on liquids, revealing that gas density influences splash thresholds by affecting crown sheet sealing, with high-speed photography supporting these findings.
Contribution
It demonstrates that gas density, not mean free path, influences cavity formation thresholds in sphere-liquid impacts, highlighting the role of gas in dynamic wetting.
Findings
Gas density affects the threshold impact speed for cavity formation.
Mean free path of gas has no significant effect.
Gas slows the sealing of the crown sheet behind the sphere.
Abstract
Formation of a splash crown and a cavity following the impact of a sphere on a body of liquid is a classical problem. In the related problem of a droplet splashing on a flat surface, it has been established that the properties of the surrounding gas can influence the splashing threshold. At lower impact speeds, this is due mainly to the influence of gas kinetic effects, since the height of the gas lubrication film which is displaced during dynamic wetting is often comparable to the mean free path of the gas. At higher Weber and Reynolds numbers, on the other hand, inertial effects dominate and the density of the gas becomes important in determining whether a splash occurs. In this article, sphere impacts on a liquid body are investigated in a rarefied atmosphere using high-speed photography. It is found that the threshold entry speed for cavity formation is influenced by the density of…
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