Skip to main content (Press Enter).
U.S. Air Force Logo
Home
About Us
Units
History
Leadership
Fact Sheets
Media
News
Features
Commentaries
Team Rescue Newsletter Archives
Resources
Airman & Family Readiness
Chaplain
Employment
Environmental Safety
Freedom of Information Act
ID Card Office
Personal Financial Counselor
Sexual Assault and Response
Contact Us
FAQs
106th Rescue Wing
Contact Us
DVIDSVideoPlayer
Playlist:
Search Results
Video by Devin Pisner, Travis Troller
Player Embed Code:
Share
Embed
Download
Michelle Otero, Engineer at Carderock
Naval Surface Warfare Center Carderock Division
July 25, 2024 | 3:53
Michelle Otero, an Engineer at Carderock, conducts resistance and repulsion research for the Cavitation Erosion project at the Naval Surface Warfare Center Carderock Division's Large Cavitation Channel at its detachment in Memphis, Tenn., July 25, 2024. Otero discusses cavitation and its effects on different building materials used in naval ships and explains how she captures data using high-speed imaging, laser Doppler velocimetry, and laser vibrometer systems. Carderock's LCC is the world’s largest and most advanced high-speed, variable-pressure water tunnel facility, and is crucial for testing the Navy's ship and submarine propellers and their interactions with hulls at scales matching the largest towing and turning basins around the globe. (U.S. Navy video by Travis Troller & Devin Pisner)
More
Tags
Carderock
STEM
Advanced Technology
Large Cavitation Channel
More
Up Next
Now Playing
Michelle Otero, Engineer at Carderock
4:19
Carderock, ONR, University of Memphis and University of Michigan Collaborate to Advance World-Class Ship Propulsor Design: "Exploring Cavitation Erosion Research, Part Two"
3:54
Elijah Andrews, Post-Doctoral Research Fellow from University of Michigan works with Carderock at the LCC
1:21
Large Cavitation Channel Timelapse of Placement of the HiFoil Model
3:37
Large Cavitation Channel (LCC)
3:34
Carderock's Large Cavitation Channel
3:53
Carderock, ONR, University of Memphis and University of Michigan Collaborate to Advance World-Class Ship Propulsor Design: "Exploring Cavitation Erosion Research, Part One"
More Videos