Water jets may break up into droplets thanks to jiggling molecules

Visible in everyday flowing fluids, the effect can originate on scales smaller than a nanometer

A stream of water breaks up into droplets as it falls into a person's hands.

A stream of water breaks into droplets as it falls, thanks to the Rayleigh-Plateau instability, which amplifies small disturbances in the jet’s surface. A team of researchers claims that those initial disturbances can come from the jiggling of individual molecules.

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Water drops plinking at the bottom of a sink may by spawned by the jiggling of individual molecules.