teavitation
Teavitation is a term used to describe cavitation-like phenomena observed in tea liquids during brewing. It refers to the formation and collapse of microbubbles in a tea infusion as a consequence of local pressure changes caused by pouring, stirring, or rapid heating. The expression is not yet standardized in the scientific literature, and teavitation is more commonly discussed in popular writings on tea physics.
During brewing, water contains dissolved air. When pressure locally falls, such as at a fast pour through
Observed effects include surface foaming, visible bubbles in the infusion, and increased agitation of the liquid.
Investigations rely on high-speed imaging, acoustic sensing, and controlled pouring experiments. Isolating teavitation from ordinary boiling
Practical implications are speculative. Adjusting pour rate, vessel geometry, and temperature may modestly influence bubble formation