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Explaining the physics of the snapping Shrimp

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DeepThought

Freediving Sloth
Sep 8, 2002
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The pysics behind snapping shrimp
 
I remember reading that or at least an article that said the same general thing. Amazing adaptation, that.
 
Amazing! I'll have to learn snapping my fingers under water that fast too. I could then use it to stun or kill prey like the shrimps do :)
 
Perhaps humans could learn to produce bubbles at high enough speeds to stun or scare off sharks.

All we need to do is average the time from the point of eating beans to the point of expulsion.
 
Deepthought, you are hereby now named "Freediver of the Order of the Deep Bubble". Sinky, some people just don't know how to fart fast enough!
 
Reactions: sinkweight
Good info. Do I got this right?

Localized very low pressure allows "boiling" at very low temperatures, then slowing down/stopping allows the bubble to implode causing a "thunderclap" vacuum infill. Isn't it like lightning? An "empty" pocket collapses, boom, stunning nearby critters.
 
Well, the mechanism at lightning is slightly different, but it is true there is also a kind of a shock wave. You may be also interested in sonoluminescence that arises from acoustic cavitation - in that case, the collapsing cavitation bubbles generate extremely hot temperature (four times the temperature of Sun!) and indeed even emit a flash of light. Read more about it here:

Temperature inside collapsing bubble four times that of sun