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We analyse a 36-year hydrodynamic and morphological dataset from the Hasaki coast, Japan, comprising 501 wave storm events (405 individual and 96 clustered events) to investigate the impact of storm dynamics and clustering on beach erosion. Focusing on the wave component of storms, events are identified using wave height thresholds. Daily and weekly beach profile measurements from the Hasaki Oceanographic Research Station are used to quantify erosion. The study examines the seasonal influences on Hasaki beach, the characteristics and temporal evolution of storms, and their associated erosional impacts. Moreover, we test two supervised machine learning (ML) algorithms, support vector regression (SVR), and deep neural network (DNN), in predicting shoreline change using 16 wave, storm, and morphological features. SVR showed reasonable accuracy on the training dataset but underperformed on testing, while DNN failed to produce reliable predictions on both. With SVR yielding an R2 of 0.18 and DNN 0.27 on the testing dataset, we conclude that, given the limited data and available features, such ML models may not generalise well. However, separate analyses using observed data reveal clear seasonal variations in wave storm dynamics and distinct behaviours of clustered events associated with beach erosion, highlighting important insights beyond the ML results.
We study the interaction between a pair of particles suspended in a uniform oscillatory flow. The time-averaged behaviour of particles under these conditions, which arises from an interplay of inertial and viscous forces, is explored through a theoretical framework relying on small oscillation amplitude. We approximate the oscillatory flow in terms of dual multipole expansions, with which we compute time-averaged interaction forces using the Lorentz reciprocal theorem. We then develop analytic approximations for the force in the limit where Stokes layers surrounding the particles do not overlap. Finally, we show how the same formalism can be generalised to the situation where the particles are free to oscillate and drift in response to the applied flow. The results are shown to be in agreement with existing numerical data for forces and particle velocities. The theory thus provides an efficient means to quantify nonlinear particle interactions in oscillatory flows.
We are in the early stage of a revolution in the field of comparative genomics. Within the past five years, thousands of animal, plant, and fungal genomes have been sequenced and assembled to high quality. There is even serious discussion around sequencing the genomes of every eukaryotic species on earth. Here, I explain why this genomic revolution is happening and discuss the feasibility of sequencing genomes on a massive scale. Having a very wide diversity of genome sequences will accelerate applied research in biomedicine, biotechnology, aquaculture, agriculture, and conservation, and facilitate fundamental research in areas such as ecology, physiology, developmental biology, and evolutionary biology. In this article, I explore new findings and new questions in evolutionary biology emerging from animal genome analyses. Examples are drawn from marine animals such as polychaetes, bivalves, cephalopods, fish, and bryozoans, plus unusual terrestrial groups such as gerbils, moths, and bee-flies. I highlight patterns of mutation, the dynamics of gene families, and chromosomal organisation of genomes as areas ripe for further research. An even wider diversity of genome sequences will be needed to fill the knowledge gaps or investigate emerging puzzles, and a case is made for sequencing the genomes of over 100,000 species.
The dynamics of thin viscous liquid films flowing down an inclined wall under gravity in the presence of an upward flowing high-speed air stream is considered. The air stream induces nonlinear waves on the interface and asymptotic solutions are developed to derive a non-local evolution equation forced by the air pressure which is obtained analytically, and incorporating a constant tangential stress. Benney equations in the capillary (strong surface tension) and inertio-capillary regimes are derived and studied. The air stream produces Turing-type short wave instabilities in sub-critical Reynolds number regimes that would be stable in the absence of the outer flow. Extensive numerical experiments are carried out to elucidate the rich dynamics in the above-mentioned short-wave regime. The stability of different branches of solutions of non-uniform steady states is carried out, along with time-dependent nonlinear computations that are used to track the large-time behaviour of attractors. A fairly complete picture of different solution types are categorised in parameter space. The effect of the Reynolds number on the wave characteristics in the inertio-capillary regime is also investigated. It is observed that, for each value of the slenderness parameter $\delta$, there exists a critical Reynolds number $R_c$ above which the solutions become unbounded by encountering finite-time singularities. Increasing the air speed significantly decreases $R_c$, making the system more prone to large amplitude singular events even at low Reynolds numbers when the system would have been stable in the absence of the air stream.
An analytical theory is presented for linear, local, short-wavelength instabilities in swirling flows, in which axial shear, differential rotation, radial thermal stratification, viscosity and thermal diffusivity are all taken into account. A geometrical optics approach is applied to the Navier–Stokes equations, coupled with the energy equation, leading to a set of amplitude transport equations. From these, a dispersion relation is derived, capturing two distinct types of instability: a stationary centrifugal instability and an oscillatory, visco-diffusive McIntyre instability. Instability regions corresponding to different axial or azimuthal wavenumbers are found to possess envelopes in the plane of physical parameters, which are explicitly determined using the discriminants of polynomials. As these envelopes are shown to bound the union of instability regions associated with particular wavenumbers, it is concluded that the envelopes correspond to curves of critical values of physical parameters, thereby providing compact, closed-form criteria for the onset of instability. The derived analytical criteria are validated for swirling flows modelled by a cylindrical, differentially rotating annulus with axial flow induced by either a sliding inner cylinder, an axial pressure gradient or a radial temperature gradient combined with vertical gravity. These criteria unify and extend, to viscous and thermodiffusive differentially heated swirling flows, the Rayleigh criterion for centrifugally driven instabilities, the Ludwieg–Eckhoff–Leibovich–Stewartson criterion for isothermal swirling flows and the Goldreich–Schubert–Fricke criterion for non-isothermal azimuthal flows. Additionally, they predict oscillatory modes in swirling, differentially heated, visco-diffusive flows, thereby generalising the McIntyre instability criterion to these systems.
Amid China’s goals to reach peak carbon emissions before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality by 2060, along with its ecological civilization agenda, the synergy between the digital economy (DE) and environmental quality (EQ) in Chinese cities has become increasingly vital. Using panel data from 285 cities between 2016 and 2021, this study constructs an integrated framework to examine the level of coordinated development between the DE and EQ, measured through the coupling coordination degree (CCD) that captures the strength and harmony of their interaction. It further analyses spatial–temporal heterogeneity and influencing factors. The results reveal: (1) both the DE and EQ have improved steadily, with the CCD rising to a moderate level and showing clear spatial clustering; and (2) economic development, educational investment and industrial upgrading boost the CCD, whereas average years of education and government intervention may hinder it. Additionally, economic development and industrial upgrading have positive spatial spillovers, and a threshold effect of government intervention is observed.
We introduce a novel unsteady shear protocol, which we name rotary shear (RS), where the flow and vorticity directions are continuously rotated around the velocity-gradient direction by imposing two out-of-phase oscillatory shears (OSs) in orthogonal directions. We perform numerical simulations of dense suspensions of rigid non-Brownian spherical particles at volume fractions ($\phi$) between 0.40 and 0.55, subject to this new RS protocol, and compare with the classical OS protocol. We find that the suspension viscosity displays a similar non-monotonic response as the strain amplitude ($\gamma _0$) is increased: a minimum viscosity is found at an intermediate, volume-fraction-dependent strain amplitude. However, the suspension dynamics is different in the new protocol. Unlike the OS protocol, suspensions under RS do not show absorbing states at any $\gamma _0$ and do not undergo the reversible–irreversible transition: the stroboscopic particle dynamics is always diffusive, which we attribute to the fact that the RS protocol is inherently irreversible due to its design. To validate this hypothesis, we introduce a reversible-RS (RRS) protocol, a combination of RS and OS, where we rotate the shear direction (as in RS) until it is instantaneously reversed (as in OS), and find the resulting rheology and dynamics to be closer to OS. Detailed microstructure analysis shows that both the OS and RRS protocols result in a contact-free, isotropic to an in-contact, anisotropic microstructure at the dynamically reversible-to-irreversible transition. The RS protocol does not render such a transition, and the dynamics remains diffusive with an in-contact, anisotropic microstructure for all strain amplitudes.
Direct numerical simulations are conducted to investigate the transition flow over a flat plate featuring pressure gradients and a three-dimensional rough surface. The rough surface is categorised into nine types based on the effective slope ratio ${E{{S}_{z}}}/{E{{S}_{x}}}$ ($ES_{z}$: spanwise effective slope, $ES_{x}$: streamwise effective slope) and skewness $Sk$, with the embedded boundary method employed for resolving the solid wall. Findings indicate that the influence of ${E{{S}_{z}}}/{E{{S}_{x}}}$ on the streamwise vortex pair counters the effects on the wall-normal shear and the two-dimensional spanwise vortex sheet. Negative skewness alone can stimulate all three components of the hairpin vortex simultaneously. The new formula for predicting the sheltering angle, which incorporates the up-ejecting segment, demonstrates enhanced accuracy in predicting the sheltering area across the entire rough surface, outperforming the previous formulation. The forward displacement relative to the drag peak of the pressure stagnation point along the streamwise direction remains unaffected by the spanwise effective slope and the skewness. In the upper transition region, negative skewness significantly intensifies both the production and dissipation terms of the fluctuating kinetic energy, which correlate with the inviscid instability of the separation flow and the viscous instability induced by the lift-up mechanism. During the early phase of transition, negative skewness is capable of producing linear modes that match the intensity of nonlinear coherent structures at intermediate to high frequencies, exhibiting quasi-orthogonality. During the late transition phase, zero skewness can give rise to linear modes featuring robust quasi-orthogonality at low frequencies.
When a low Mach flow is imposed through an orifice at the end of a cavity, intense whistling can occur. It results from the constructive feedback loop between the acoustic field of the cavity and coherent vortex shedding at the edges of the orifice with bias flow. Whistling is often a source of unwanted noise, demanding passive control strategies. In this study, it is shown that whistling can be suppressed by utilising the slow-sound effect. This periodic arrangement of small cavities detunes the cavity from the frequency range where the orifice flow exhibits a potential for acoustic energy amplification, by reducing the effective speed of sound inside the cavity. Acoustic and optical measurement techniques are employed, including scattering matrix and impedance measurements, and particle image velocimetry to reconstruct the velocity field downstream of the orifice. The production and dissipation of acoustic energy is investigated using Howe’s energy corollary. The spatio-temporal patterns of the vortex sound downstream of the orifice are revealed. They are deduced from phase-averaged acoustic and Lamb vector fields and give qualitative insight into the physical mechanisms of the whistling phenomenon.
The attainable metastability is key to the behaviour of liquids undergoing rapid depressurisation. This tells us how far the liquid can be depressurised, or stretched, before phase change occurs. Previous work on the depressurisation of liquids through nozzles and pipes shows that classical nucleation theory (CNT) can predict the attainable metastability close to the critical point, but fails at lower temperatures. In the latter case, it is common to correct the CNT prediction using a strongly temperature-dependent empirical reduction factor. In the present work, we show that the trend at low temperatures naturally follows if the metastability of the liquid is limited by the growth of pre-existing bubbles. With the new volume balancing method, we calculate the attainable metastability for systems with pre-existing bubbles and attain excellent fit with data for both $\textrm {CO}_2$ and water systems. The method has one tuning parameter related to the number of available bubbles in the flow, which is temperature independent.
The magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) mixed convection in a rectangular cross-section of a long vertical duct is considered. The surrounding walls of the duct can be considered for a wide range of scenarios in this analytical solution, such as arbitrary conductivity, thickness and asymmetry. Analytical solutions are also obtained for various of the governing parameters: Grashof number ($\mathop {\textit{Gr}}\nolimits$), Reynolds number ($Re$), and Hartmann number ($\mathop {\textit{Ha}}\nolimits$). Three convection states under varying ${{\mathop {\textit{Gr}}\nolimits }}/{{\mathop {\textit{Re}}\nolimits }}$ – forced convection, mixed convection and buoyancy-dominated convection – are investigated. When $ {{\mathop {\textit{Gr}}\nolimits }}/{{\mathop {\textit{Re}}\nolimits }}$ increases to a critical value $( {{\mathop {\textit{Gr}}\nolimits }}/{{\mathop {\textit{Re}}\nolimits }})_c$, a reverse flow is observed and $({{\mathop {\textit{Gr}}\nolimits }}/{{\mathop {\textit{Re}}\nolimits }})_c$ is identified for both insulated and electrically conducting ducts. In MHD mixed convection, where $ ({{\mathop {\textit{Gr}}\nolimits }}/{{\mathop {\textit{Re}}\nolimits }}) \sim 1$, the fully developed flow exhibits a steady velocity gradient in the core, scaling as $\sim ({{\mathop {\textit{Gr}}\nolimits }})/({2{\mathop {\textit{Ha}}\nolimits }{\mathop {\textit{Re}}\nolimits }})$ (Tagawa et al. 2002 Eur.J.Mech. B/Fluids21, 383–398) in the insulated scenario, and this work extends it to the electrically conducting scenario, scaling as $\sim ({{\mathop {\textit{Gr}}\nolimits }})/({2{\mathop {\textit{Re}}\nolimits }{\mathop {\textit{Ha}}\nolimits }(1 + c{\mathop {\textit{Ha}}\nolimits })})$, where $c$ denotes the wall conductance ratio, accompanied by asymmetrical velocity jets. Effects of conductive walls on both pressure drop and flow distribution are thoroughly analysed. The pressure gradient distribution as a function of $\mathop {\textit{Ha}}\nolimits$ is given, in which the combined effect of arbitrary sidewalls and Hartmann walls on the distributions is well illustrated. The wall asymmetry has profound effects on the velocity distribution, especially for the high-velocity jet areas where Hartmann walls exert an opposite effect to that of sidewalls. The velocity magnitude is significantly larger around lower conducting sidewalls and raises questions about new potential instability schemes for high $\mathop {\textit{Re}}\nolimits$, as discussed in previous studies (Krasnov et al. 2016 Numerical simulations of MHD flow transition…; Kinet et al. 2009 Phys. Rev. Lett.103, 154501).
A practical and interdisciplinary guide to creating liveable, circular economy cities. Practical strategies enhance the book's theoretical exploration of circular economies, providing a solution-oriented perspective on creating more resilient, environmentally sustainable and liveable cities. The chapter authors offer interdisciplinary perspectives on the transformative potential of circular economies when incorporating ecological and social aspects with innovative technologies. The topics covered range from sustainable agriculture and water management to renewable energy and environmental justice. Case studies of cities from around the world promote effective best practices in circular economy implementations across diverse cities, including Tokyo, Singapore, New York, Vancouver, Sydney, the Hague, Barcelona, and Stockholm. This book introduces and discusses the 5R framework - Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, Restore, Recover - as a guiding principle, elaborating its applications across various urban sectors. This book is indispensable for advanced students, researchers, city planners, and policymakers working in urban planning and sustainable development.
The presence of a basal cingulum, fluting, and overall size have been used to differentiate nodosaurid and ankylosaurid teeth for decades. The taxonomic utility of tooth morphology in ankylosaurs, however, has not been quantitatively tested. In addition, new phylogenetic hypotheses recognize four ankylosaur families (Panoplosauridae, Polacanthidae, Struthiosauridae, and Ankylosauridae), rather than the traditional nodosaurid–ankylosaurid dichotomy. Understanding ankylosaur tooth variation could better help identify taxa with ambiguous phylogenetic affinities or allow isolated teeth to test paleoecological questions such as a potential extirpation of mid-Cretaceous ankylosaurids from Laramidia. We analyzed a large sample of ankylosaur teeth using traditional and geometric morphometrics and investigated the utility of size and the presence of a cingulum and fluting for differentiating ankylosaur teeth. Morphometric analyses show that “nodosaurids” had the greatest variation in tooth shape and size. Panoplosauridae and Struthiosauridae account for a large amount of “nodosaurid” variation, whereas basal ankylosaurs, Polacanthidae, and Ankylosauridae share a similar restricted morphospace. Teeth with a crown base length or height over 10 mm are found only in panoplosaurids, struthiosaurids, and Peloroplites, but smaller sizes are found in all clades. A basal cingulum and fluting are associated with Ankylosauridae and Panoplosauridae. Linear discriminant analyses could accurately identify only between 50% and 75% of the teeth in our sample; thus, they should be used in conjunction with size and discrete traits when identifying isolated teeth. With these findings, caution should be used when attempting to use isolated ankylosaur teeth in broader paleoecological questions, and reclassification of museum collections should be undertaken.
Intergenerational justice is the core principle supporting the legacy of benefit toward future generations, including the perpetuation of species and their genetic diversity, as a key component of biospheric sustainability. Thirty percent of Earth’s terrestrial habitats are now undergoing protection, biodiversity hotspots are being targeted, and there is increasing community awareness and engagement in conservation. However, the impending sixth mass extinction threatens to drive many species to extinction in the wild, irrespective of these interventions. Earth’s biosphere is now undergoing terraforming through ecosystem destruction and modification, urbanization, and agriculture. Therefore, transformative cultural, political, and economic incentives are needed to maximize the legacy of the Earth’s biodiversity and biospheric sustainability toward future generations. Reproduction and advanced biotechnologies can perpetuate species and their genetic diversity while also contributing to human and animal health and agricultural production. Advanced reproduction biotechnologies, including genetic engineering and synthetic biology, provide a new horizon for biospheric management, through the de-extinction of ancient species, restoring recently lost species, and maintaining the genetic diversity of extant species through wildlife biobanking. More extensive and inclusive conservation breeding programs and wildlife biobanking resources/facilities are desperately needed to perpetuate more than 3,000 Critically Endangered terrestrial/freshwater species; a goal fully attainable for amphibians and smaller fishes through global inclusion of stakeholders including private caregivers, plausible for freshwater mussels and crayfish, in development for reptiles and birds, and applicable for many mammals. As this capacity develops, many otherwise neglected species that are losing their natural habitat can be perpetuated solely in biobanks, thus enabling the more efficient utilization of resources toward meaningful field conservation primarily through habitat protection. The full potential of reproduction and advanced biotechnologies includes the development of artificial wombs to address the human population crisis and to avoid surrogacy mismatching during species restoration or de-extinction. The use of advanced reproduction biotechnologies for direct human benefit, for species management, and for biospheric sustainability, are subject to evolving ethical and legal frameworks, particularly regarding genetic engineering, transhumanism, and the de-extinction of ancient species.
Accurate prediction of the hydrodynamic forces on particles is central to the fidelity of Euler–Lagrange (EL) simulations of particle-laden flows. Traditional EL methods typically rely on determining the hydrodynamic forces at the positions of the individual particles from the interpolated fluid velocity field, and feed these hydrodynamic forces back to the location of the particles. This approach can introduce significant errors in two-way coupled simulations, especially when the particle diameter is not much smaller than the computational grid spacing. In this study, we propose a novel force correlation framework that circumvents the need for undisturbed velocity estimation by leveraging volume-filtered quantities available directly from EL simulations. Through a rigorous analytical derivation in the Stokes regime and extensive particle-resolved direct numerical simulations (PR-DNS) at finite Reynolds numbers, we formulate force correlations that depend solely on the volume-filtered fluid velocity and local volume fraction, parametrised by the filter width. These correlations are shown to recover known drag laws in the appropriate asymptotic limits and exhibit a good agreement with analytical and high-fidelity numerical benchmarks for single-particle cases, and, compared with existing correlations, an improved agreement for the drag force on particles in particle assemblies. The proposed framework significantly enhances the accuracy of hydrodynamic force predictions for both isolated particles and dense suspensions, without incurring the prohibitive computational costs associated with reconstructing undisturbed flow fields. This advancement lays the foundation for robust, scalable and high-fidelity EL simulations of complex particulate flows across a wide range of industrial and environmental applications.
This paper investigates the flow and density field around a spinning solid spheroid with a given aspect ratio, immersed in a rotating stratified fluid. First, we derive the general system of equations governing such flows around any solid of revolution in the limit of infinite Schmidt number. We then present an exact analytical solution for a spinning spheroid of arbitrary aspect ratio. For the specific case of a sphere, we provide the diffusive spin-up solution obtained via an inverse Laplace integral. To validate the theoretical results, we experimentally reproduce these flows by spinning spheroids in a rotating tank filled with stratified salt water. By varying the stratification intensity, the angular velocities of the spheroid and the rotating table, and the spheroid’s shape, we explore a broad parameter space defined by Froude, Reynolds and Rossby numbers and aspect ratio. Using particle image velocimetry to measure the velocity field, we demonstrate excellent agreement between theory and experiments across all tested regimes.
The problem of a uniform current interacting with bodies submerged beneath a homogeneous ice sheet is considered, based on linearised velocity potential theory for fluid and elastic thin plate theory for ice sheet. This problem is commonly solved by the boundary element method (BEM) with the Green function, which is highly effective except when the Green function becomes singular, and the direct solution of the BEM is no longer possible. However, flow behaviour, body force and ice sheet deflection near the critical Froude numbers are of major practical interest, such as in ice breaking. The present work successfully resolves this challenge. A modified boundary integral equation (BIE) is derived, which converts the singular Green function term to a far-field one and removes the singularity. The BIE is then imposed at infinity for additional unknowns in the far field. It is proved that the solution is finite and continuous at the critical Froude number $F = F_c$, where the body starts generating travelling waves, and finite but discontinuous at depth-based Froude number $F = 1^\pm$. Case studies are conducted for single and double circular cylinders and an elliptical cylinder with various angles of attack. A comprehensive analysis is made on the hydrodynamic forces and the generated flexural gravity wave profiles, and their physical implications are discussed. It is also concluded that the method developed in this paper is not confined to the present case but is also applicable to a variety of related problems when the BEM fails at the critical points.
The extensional rheology of dilute suspensions of spheres in viscoelastic/polymeric liquids is studied computationally. At low polymer concentration $c$ and Deborah number $\textit{De}$ (imposed extension rate times polymer relaxation time), a wake of highly stretched polymers forms downstream of the particles due to larger local velocity gradients than the imposed flow, indicated by $\Delta \textit{De}_{\textit{local}}\gt 0$. This increases the suspension’s extensional viscosity with time and $\textit{De}$ for $De \lt 0.5$. When $\textit{De}$ exceeds 0.5, the coil-stretch transition value, the fully stretched polymers from the far-field collapse in regions with $\Delta \textit{De}_{\textit{local}} \lt 0$ (lower velocity gradient) around the particle’s stagnation points, reducing suspension viscosity relative to the particle-free liquid. The interaction between local flow and polymers intensifies with increasing $c$. Highly stretched polymers impede local flow, reducing $\Delta \textit{De}_{\textit{local}}$, while $\Delta \textit{De}_{\textit{local}}$ increases in regions with collapsed polymers. Initially, increasing $c$ aligns $\Delta \textit{De}_{\textit{local}}$ and local polymer stretch with far-field values, diminishing particle–polymer interaction effects. However, beyond a certain $c$, a new mechanism emerges. At low $c$, fluid three particle radii upstream exhibits $\Delta \textit{De}_{\textit{local}} \gt 0$, stretching polymers beyond their undisturbed state. As $c$ increases, however, $\Delta \textit{De}_{\textit{local}}$ in this region becomes negative, collapsing polymers and resulting in increasingly negative stress from particle–polymer interactions at large $\textit{De}$ and time. At high $c$, this negative interaction stress scales as $c^2$, surpassing the linear increase of particle-free polymer stress, making dilute sphere concentrations more effective at reducing the viscosity of viscoelastic liquids at larger $\textit{De}$ and $c$.
The prehistoric human habitation of the Tibetan Plateau (TP) is well evidenced by the archaeological record, but poorly constrained in time and space. To test the plausibility of in situ survival during the last glacial maximum (LGM) and the coldest periods of the Pleistocene, this paper gauges the effects of LGM conditions and varying local ice coverage on the climate. Three different climate model scenarios are generated, and their outputs are used to drive vegetation simulations. This allows us to evaluate 10 archaeological sites that show evidence of human activity either pre- or post-LGM as possible human refugia. The results show that the higher the level of ice coverage on the plateau, the colder and drier the climate becomes, and barren unproductive land extends farther south. However, there are sites that remain habitable in all scenarios, with the southern and northeastern plateau identified as the areas with the highest likelihood of refugia during the LGM, specifically at the locations of Baishiya Karst Cave and Siling Co. There is a high probability of the TP being habitable during the LGM, as even the scenario with the most ice yields some regions with favourable conditions that are within the habitability criteria.
We experimentally and theoretically examine the maximum spreading of viscous droplets impacting ultra-smooth solid surfaces, where viscosity plays a dominant role in governing droplet spreading. For low-viscosity droplets, viscous dissipation occurs mainly in a thin boundary layer near the liquid–solid interface, whereas for high-viscosity droplets, dissipation is expected to extend throughout the droplet bulk. Incorporating these dissipation mechanisms with energy conservation principles, two distinct theoretical scaling laws for the maximum spreading factor ($\beta _m$) are derived: $\beta _m \sim ({\textit{We}}/ {\textit{Oh}})^{1/6}$ for low-viscosity regimes (${\textit{Oh}} \lesssim 0.1$) and $\beta _m \sim \textit{Re}^{1/5}$ for high-viscosity regimes (${\textit{Oh}} \gt 1$), where $\textit{We}$, $\textit{Re}$ and $\textit{Oh}$ are the Weber, Reynolds and Ohnesorge numbers, respectively. Both scaling laws show good agreement with the experimental data for their respective validity ranges of $\textit{Oh}$. Furthermore, to better model experimental data at vanishing $\textit{Re}$, we introduce a semi-empirical scaling law, $\beta _m \sim (A + {\textit{We}}/ {\textit{Oh}})^{1/6}$, where $A$ is a fitting parameter accounting for finite spreading ($\beta _m \approx 1$) at negligible impact velocities. This semi-empirical law provides an effective description of $\beta _m$ for a broad experimental range of $10^{-3} \leqslant {\textit{Oh}} \leqslant 10^0$ and $10^1 \leqslant {\textit{We}} \leqslant 10^3$.