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‘Antigravity’ Sailboat Floats under the Water’s Surface

Small objects bob on either side of a levitating layer of water


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In this digitally colorized image, one of two small sailboats floats on the underside of a blue layer of water. Researchers filled a container with viscous liquid, which they vibrated vigorously at a high frequency. The fast vibrations caused the liquid to “levitate” within the container. Stable air bubbles lay beneath it. There, the scientists found, small objects (up to seven grams in mass and 2.5 centimeters in length or diameter)could float on the underside of the water layer, appearing upside down. This “antigravity” effect, they speculate, is created by fluctuating gravity formed within the container by the rapid vibrations.

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Andrea Gawrylewski is chief newsletter editor at Scientific American. She writes the daily Today in Science newsletter and oversees all other newsletters at the magazine. In addition, she manages all special collector's editions and in the past was the editor for Scientific American Mind, Scientific American Space & Physics and Scientific American Health & Medicine. Gawrylewski got her start in journalism at the Scientist magazine, where she was a features writer and editor for "hot" research papers in the life sciences. She spent more than six years in educational publishing, editing books for higher education in biology, environmental science and nutrition. She holds a master's degree in earth science and a master's degree in journalism, both from Columbia University, home of the Pulitzer Prize.

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