Viscous fingers have been produced in the lifting Hele-Shaw cell, with
concentric circular grooves etched onto the lower plate. The invading fluid
(air) enters the defending newtonian fluid - olive oil as fingers proceeding
radially inwards towards the centre. The fingers are interrupted at the
circular groove, and reform as secondary fingers. The effect of the grooves is
to speed up the fingering process considerably and the fingers now reach the
centre much faster. We explain this by comparing the variation in velocity of
the fingers in the normal HS cell and the grooved cells with time. In the
normal HS cell the fingers move fastest on initial formation and slow down
later. Since in case of the grooved plate, the fingers reform and receive a
boost in their speed each time they encounter a groove, the fingers proceed to
the centre faster. PACS nos. 47.20.Gv, 47.54.+r, 68.03.-gComment: 4 pg. 2 fi