Skip to main content

Questions tagged [everyday-life]

Concerns the application of the laws of physics to analyze common situations encountered in everyday life.

196 votes
21 answers
171k views

Given Newton's third law, why are things capable of moving?

Given Newton's third law, why is there motion at all? Should not all forces even themselves out, so nothing moves at all? When I push a table using my finger, the table applies the same force onto my ...
user16458's user avatar
  • 2,003
182 votes
14 answers
77k views

Why does holding something up cost energy while no work is being done?

I read the definition of work as $$W ~=~ \vec{F} \cdot \vec{d}$$ $$\text{ Work = (Force) $\cdot$ (Distance)}.$$ If a book is there on the table, no work is done as no distance is covered. If I ...
SMUsamaShah's user avatar
  • 5,377
88 votes
10 answers
21k views

How can magnets be used to pick up pieces of metal when the force from a magnetic field does no work?

I learned that the force from a magnetic field does no work. However I was wondering how magnets can be used to pick up pieces of metal like small paperclips and stuff. I also was wondering how ...
sTr8_Struggin's user avatar
247 votes
8 answers
44k views

Does Earth really have two high-tide bulges on opposite sides?

The bit that makes sense – tidal forces My physics teacher explained that most tidal effect is caused by the Moon rotating around the Earth, and some also by the Sun. They said that in the Earth - ...
Benjohn's user avatar
  • 3,100
76 votes
4 answers
341k views

How does water evaporate if it doesn't boil?

When the sun is out after a rain, I can see what appears to be steam rising off a wooden bridge nearby. I'm pretty sure this is water turning into a gas. However, I thought water had to reach 100 ...
Malcolm Crum's user avatar
  • 1,053
126 votes
5 answers
26k views

Why do wet objects become darker?

When something gets wet, it usually appears darker. This can be observed with soil, sand, cloth, paper, concrete, bricks... What is the reason for this? How does water soaking into the material ...
Suma's user avatar
  • 1,412
814 votes
24 answers
262k views

Cooling a cup of coffee with help of a spoon

During breakfast with my colleagues, a question popped into my head: What is the fastest method to cool a cup of coffee, if your only available instrument is a spoon? A qualitative answer would be ...
fortran's user avatar
  • 7,857
15 votes
2 answers
4k views

Why is the return current through a printed circuit board's ground plane concentrated below the circuit trace?

The Wikipedia article on ground plane says In addition, a ground plane under printed circuit traces [the paths that the circuit currents take] can reduce crosstalk between adjacent traces. When two ...
tparker's user avatar
  • 48.4k
184 votes
8 answers
31k views

Why do shadows from the sun join each other when near enough?

I was laying on my bed, reading a book when the sun shone through the windows on my left. I happened to look at the wall on my right and noticed this very strange effect. The shadow of my elbow, when ...
turnip's user avatar
  • 3,678
33 votes
4 answers
10k views

Why does a cork float to the side of a glass?

Why does a cork ball float to the side of a glass as illustrated in the following GIF? What is the physical phenomenon behind this observation and why does it happen?
Mohammad Fakhrey's user avatar
9 votes
7 answers
6k views

Is electricity instantaneous?

My question is basically what exactly is electricity? I've simply been told before that it's a flow of electrons, but this seems too basic and doesn't show that electricity is instant. What I mean is ...
Jonathan.'s user avatar
  • 6,927
17 votes
2 answers
13k views

Height of Water 'Splashing'

Suppose from a height $H$, I throw a ball of mass $M$ and radius $R$ with initial velocity $u$ into a pool of depth $x$ having a liquid with density $\rho$ and coefficient of viscosity $\eta$. Upto ...
NeilRoy's user avatar
  • 293
76 votes
5 answers
161k views

Do low frequency sounds really carry longer distances?

It is a common belief that low frequencies travel longer distances. Indeed, the bass is really what you hear when the neighbor plays his HiFi loud (Woom Woom). Try asking people around, a lot of them ...
Max's user avatar
  • 863
535 votes
8 answers
64k views

Can I compute the mass of a coin based on the sound of its fall?

The other day, I bumped my bookshelf and a coin fell down. This gave me an idea. Is it possible to compute the mass of a coin, based on the sound emitted when it falls? I think that there should be a ...
Vinicius L. Beserra's user avatar
75 votes
3 answers
15k views

Why do I see a saddle in this picture of a computer screen?

I am not entirely sure this is an appropriate question for PSE, however since many of you have such diverse backgrounds, I'll give it a shot. I have noticed that when one takes a picture of a computer,...
coreyman317's user avatar
22 votes
3 answers
18k views

Why does sunset over a body of water cause a path of light stretching towards the horizon?

Have you ever notice the sunset's image in the sea? It's like long light path to the end of the horizon! I've attached a sample of this: How can we explain this? I know that it can happen even in ...
jack's user avatar
  • 325
8 votes
5 answers
4k views

How does buoyancy work?

I realised, reading another Phys.SE question about balloons moving forwards in an accelerating car that I don't really understand how buoyancy works. Particularly concerning, for a SCUBA diver. The ...
Benjohn's user avatar
  • 3,100
170 votes
2 answers
42k views

Why do sunbeams diverge even though the sun is much more than a few kilometers away?

Consider this picture of sun beams streaming onto the valley through the clouds. Given that the valley is only (at a guess) 3km wide, with simple trigonometry and the angles of the beams, this gives ...
user avatar
105 votes
12 answers
29k views

Why is filling a balloon from your mouth much harder initially?

Why is it that when you first fill up a balloon, it's hard to get air through, but after inflating it a bit, it becomes much easier to further inflate the balloon?
yuritsuki's user avatar
  • 1,638
63 votes
3 answers
7k views

Why do the big nuts always remain at top? The Brazil-nut Effect

Most of the time when I mixed different nuts in a bowl, I observed that the big Brazil nuts were always on top while the small peanuts settled near the base. No matter how you take it, if the big nuts ...
user avatar
45 votes
8 answers
53k views

Ice skating, how does it really work?

Some textbooks I came across, and a homework assignment I had to do several years ago, suggested that the reason we can skate on ice is the peculiar $p(T)$-curve of the ice-water boundary. The ...
Lagerbaer's user avatar
  • 14.9k
29 votes
10 answers
10k views

What's the difference between running up a hill and running up an inclined treadmill?

Clearly there will be differences like air resistance; I'm not interested in that. It seems like you're working against gravity when you're actually running in a way that you're not if you're on a ...
user avatar
17 votes
4 answers
115k views

Why do we use kilograms instead of newtons to measure weight in everyday life?

What was the reason to use kilograms to measure weight (e.g. body weight, market vegetables etc.) instead of using newtons in everyday life?
Jake's user avatar
  • 402
510 votes
6 answers
81k views

How does light bend around my finger tip?

When I close one eye and put the tip of my finger near my open eye, it seems as if the light from the background image bends around my finger slightly, warping the image near the edges of my blurry ...
Daniel A.A. Pelsmaeker's user avatar
91 votes
12 answers
25k views

What makes running so much less energy-efficient than bicycling?

Most people can ride 10 km on their bike. However, running 10 km is a lot harder to do. Why? According to the law of conservation of energy, bicycling should be more intensive because you have to ...
Steven Roose's user avatar
59 votes
3 answers
38k views

Why is boiling water loud, then quiet? [duplicate]

Water in my electric kettle makes the most noise sixty to ninety seconds before the water comes to a full boil. I have been fooled many times by the noisy kettle, only to discover that the water was ...
Mark Dominus's user avatar
  • 2,698
21 votes
4 answers
47k views

Why do I always hear remote train horn at night?

This is definitely not an illusion, as many people have the same experience. I have usually lived in places miles away from train stations, which makes it unlikely to hear any train horns during the ...
Chenming Zhang's user avatar
14 votes
2 answers
11k views

Why does soda fizz when it meets ice?

I read that the soda's temperature allows it to contain its $\text{CO}_2$: colder means it can retain its bubbles better. So, why does soda fizz when it meets ice? If anything, because the soda is ...
user2738698's user avatar
372 votes
29 answers
148k views

Why are mirror images flipped horizontally but not vertically?

Why is it that when you look in the mirror left and right directions appear flipped, but not the up and down?
Arlen's user avatar
  • 3,907
63 votes
15 answers
31k views

Why does dust stick to rotating fan propeller?

Why does dust stick to rotating fan propeller? Intuitively, most people (including I) think of the dust will not stick to rotating fan propellers.
Display Name's user avatar
  • 2,699

15 30 50 per page
1
2 3 4 5
15