September 18, 2024 Ellen Phiddian
(One of the teachers with whom I worked had a beautiful tattoo of this painting on her inner wrist. She said it gave her strength. I need to send this to her, as she tutors STEAM aside from classroom work, and this is her top favorite painting.)

Scientists have peered at Vincent van Goghās The Starry Night painting and discovered it displays a startling resemblance to real atmospheric turbulence.
To see stars, one needs clear skies. But just because we canāt see it, doesnāt mean there arenāt intricate patterns of air movement above us on a clear night.
A paper published in Physics of Fluids, suggests that van Gogh had an āintuitiveā understanding of this while making his famous painting in 1889.
A Chinese and French team analysed the brush strokes in The Starry Night, aiming to see how similar they were to real atmospheric movements.
The masterpiece has been the subject of several atmospheric studies before, with contradictory conclusions, but the researchers say theyāre the first to look at all of the paintingās whirls and eddies.
They looked at the 14 main swirls in the painting, and compared these with theories on energy and turbulent flows in the atmosphere.
āThe scale of the paint strokes played a crucial role,ā says author Associate Professor Yongxiang Huang, a researcher in fluid dynamics at Xiamen University, China.
āWith a high-resolution digital picture, we were able to measure precisely the typical size of the brushstrokes and compare these to the scales expected from turbulence theories.ā

As well as brush stroke size, the researchers also examined the ārelative luminanceā of paint colours used in the paintingās swirls.
They found that the picture aligned with a theory of turbulence called Kolmogorovās Law, which predicts atmospheric movement based on measured inertia.
The changes in brightness reflect a process called Batchelorās scaling, which describes how fluids diffuse at smaller scales.
āIt reveals a deep and intuitive understanding of natural phenomena,ā says Huang.
āVan Goghās precise representation of turbulence might be from studying the movement of clouds and the atmosphere or an innate sense of how to capture the dynamism of the sky.ā
https://cosmosmagazine.com/science/physics/van-gogh-starry-night-atmosphere/
Hi Scottie.
I don’t know about any of that, but… I know a favorite song, and so I offer it as my only submission to the master.
Hugs!
Randy
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I love this song, too. Thank you!
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