When placed onto a vibrating liquid bath, a droplet may adopt a permanent
bouncing behavior, depending on both the forcing frequency and the forcing
amplitude. The relationship between the droplet deformations and the bouncing
mechanism is studied experimentally and theoretically through an asymmetric and
dissipative bouncing spring model. Antiresonance effects are evidenced.
Experiments and theoretical predictions show that both resonance at specific
frequencies and antiresonance at Rayleigh frequencies play crucial roles in the
bouncing mechanism. In particular, we show that they can be exploited for
droplet size selection.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures and 1 vide