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Saturday, March 5, 2022

Rupert's drop

 

Rupert's Drop

Prince Rupert’s drops are formed by dropping hot molten glass into cold water.

This gives a drop like tadpole shape (see the image taken from Creative common licence). The drop has a strong head and a tail.

This develops opposing forces of high compressive strength on the outside and high tensile strength on the inside making the tail incredibly sensitive. Even if you hit the bulky head portion with a hammer or a hard material it doesn’t break nor can a bullet pierce through.But if the tail is disturbed, then the drop is no more hard.




 

The drop becomes fragile when the  tail is distorted. Because of those opposing forces, a minor distortion to a drop’s tail causes the whole structure to explode, almost at 1lakh frames /second.

These drops are also called Batavian tears

Prince Rupert's drops were discovered in the 17th century

Rupert of Bavaria presented 5 drops to Charles II of England. These were turned over to the Royal Society for study in 1661.

One significant use:  for making tempered glass for modern smartphone screens