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Questions tagged [water]

Two Hydrogen atoms covalently bonded to one Oxygen atom. One of the more common compounds on the surface of the earth.

0 votes
0 answers
36 views

Temperature of a resting glass of water

It’s summer and summers have become more and more hot&humid lately. This got me curious about the dew point and then wet bulb temperatures, both for scientific and (maybe, someday in the future) ...
Utkan Gezer's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
86 views
+50

Albedo of water vs temperature

This question arose out of pure curiosity. Is there a relation between the temperature of water and its albedo? Would the albedo increase if I increased temperature? Say I measure albedo by directing ...
Vivaan Daga's user avatar
0 votes
6 answers
152 views

Why won't there be any transfer of heat energy when ice at 0°C is in contact with water at 0°C in a closed container?

In my book, Concise Physics of Selina Publications for Class IX, it's written there that "If there is no transfer of heat between the two bodies placed in contact, they are said to be at the same ...
Kakiaririki's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
18 views

Pressure build inside water tank [closed]

It‘s been a few years since I had my last physics class so please be kind to me. I came here to ask you about a phenomenon I recently discovered in a design of mine. The object in question is a stand ...
saeppi's user avatar
  • 101
1 vote
1 answer
35 views

Can siphons improve the efficiency of hydroelectric dams?

Suppose we have built a hydroelectric dam where the water inlet is 100m above the outlet. We can now use the gravitational potential of the water to spin a turbine. However, suppose we install a ...
orlp's user avatar
  • 162
0 votes
0 answers
26 views

Energy Benefits of Using Windows Vacuums to Remove Water That Otherwise Evaporates and Absorbs Energy

I've been using a new window vac and pondering its effect on the temperature in the house - and there seems nothing written about this that I can find. Plainly when the water evaporates energy is ...
Davo's user avatar
  • 1
-1 votes
2 answers
103 views

Why rain drops are spherical while water droplets on a glass surface are flat?

Why are raindrops spherical when falling through the air, but lose their spherical shape when they are on a flat surface?
Helix Nebula's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
29 views

Does Pipe Temperature Directly Correlate To Water Temperature? [closed]

I need to know if just by taking a boiler flow pipe temperature that will tell me the water temperature that is flowing through the pipe. For example if the water from the boiler travelling through ...
Ross Hayward's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
47 views

If I'm inside water, is the amount of heat energy I can receive capped because water can't go above 100°C?

I just learned about double-boiling, where instead of putting a pot directly on the flame stove (where it can get too hot), you put a big tub of water on the flame, and put the pot in the tub of water....
chausies's user avatar
  • 1,090
0 votes
0 answers
22 views

Intuition about SCAN-DFT

I am currently performing molecular dynamics simulations of water/ice and would like some intuition behind some of the results I am seeing. For context, I am using the water model described in this ...
Baba Booey's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
22 views

Drying polymers (e.g. FDM 3D printing filaments)

As far as I understand, a polymer absorb some moisture and amount of (maximum) moisture that can be absorbed depends on its type (PLA ~1%, ABS? ~10%). Both simple commercial filament dryers and drying ...
mete's user avatar
  • 101
2 votes
1 answer
57 views

Velocity Needed For Water To Overcome Adhesion Force To A Rounded Steel Inclined Plane

Context: I work at a fast food restaurant with a 3-module sink. The sides are slightly angled down to allow the water to trickle down into the compartments. I found that water clings to the side of ...
Rrasco88's user avatar
6 votes
2 answers
381 views

Earthen Pots made in summers vs winters

I've heard my parents saying that the water in earthen pots that are made in winters cools more than a pots that are made in summers. Is this true according to physics? I understand the process of ...
Gajjze's user avatar
  • 169
9 votes
3 answers
2k views

Rotating a Pot of Boiling Water on a Stove

I have just boiled a half dozen eggs and wanted to ask about a phenomenon I have witnessed for years but have bottled up inside for so long. Why, when the water is near boiling and nice and hot, does ...
Alexandre DeFreitas's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
121 views

How do bubbles on water surface merge?

When we open a tap over a water surface, we get to see a lot of bubbles ("half merged in the water") coming out on the surface. Now what I saw was that two such nearby half bubbles merge to ...
Ankit's user avatar
  • 8,220
2 votes
0 answers
82 views

Why does $\rm{H_2 O}$ have 12 degrees of freedom?

I know there will be 3 translational D.O.F. and 3 rotational D.O.F., and it can have 4 vibrational D.O.F. (one potential and one kinetic) for each O-H Bond. But from where does 2 more D.O.F. come from?...
Ujjwal's user avatar
  • 41
0 votes
1 answer
38 views

Water and ice, scales [closed]

There are scales with an identical bowl on each pan. We pour some amount of water into the first bowl. We pour less water and put an ice cube into the second bowl so the level of water in both bowls ...
Piotr H's user avatar
  • 23
0 votes
0 answers
35 views

How long for boiling water to cool down in a cooler?

I have no knowledge in physics but I drink green tea, and it requires water at 70 degree (so does the package say). My boiler can only heat to 100 degrees (not below), so I would like to know how long ...
Victor's user avatar
  • 1
0 votes
0 answers
34 views

Difficulties understanding fluid flow claims in the context of animal physiology/cardiovascular networks

A topic that has repeatedly given me confusion is the notion of fluid flow through animal vasculature. I find that many of the 'physics 101' basic notions of fluid dynamics are not well-suited to deal ...
S.C.'s user avatar
  • 125
1 vote
4 answers
146 views

General Doubt. My doubt about combustion

When we give flame to a newspaper it burns readily. What we need for a fire (fuel, heat, Oxygen) is also known as the fire triangle. But why does the paper not burn when we pour boiling water over it? ...
Gautam's user avatar
  • 47
0 votes
1 answer
37 views

Keeping sparkling water inside a bottle as aerated as it was before opening bottle

So when you open a new bottle of sparkling water (or soda) it's very fizzy and aerated. However, when it is stored for quite a bit (no matter how tightly you close the bottle cap) it loses some gases ...
bonbon's user avatar
  • 21
2 votes
0 answers
35 views

Apparent position of object in bowl of water

Say you have a bowl of water and you keep an object in it. What would the apparent position of an object inside the bowl from the position of an outside observer? Will the curvature of the spherical ...
Astrovis's user avatar
  • 187
3 votes
1 answer
94 views

Does having a liquid (less dense than ice) above a floating (in water) ice cube, change the fact that the water level remains constant when ice melts?

An ice cube floats in water, with a liquid (less dense than ice) above it. When the ice cube melts will the water level go up, down or remain constant?
WilliamHarvey's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
40 views

How long to put Silica gel in microwave oven?

I have a 800 W microwave oven and want to dry some silica gel packages (each labeled with 10 g and sealed in paper mantling). The silica gel is colorless and seems to be of the kind of silica gels ...
user7468395's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
24 views

Does the specific heat of water vary with pressure?

I know that there is both a Cp and Cv value, but here's what I don't understand: are they independent of what the absolute pressure is? They vary with temperature, and tables can be readily found with ...
Michael's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
25 views

Best mesh design for a tea strainer [closed]

I'm currently designing a closed tea strainer / egg made of stainless steel and testing a prototype made of polycarbonate plastic. The problem I'm facing likely has to do with the capillary effect - ...
Andrew Jackson's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
74 views

Can latent heat exist when both phases cannot exist at same temperature?

This is my understanding (please tell me if i am going wrong anywhere): During phase change (i.e. ice melting into water) the molecules absorb heat, gain more random kinetic energy, and spread apart (...
Varshil MVH Pets's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
75 views

For a liquid at boiling point, how can it require a set amount of heat (latent heat) to vaporize

I've always had a hard time wrapping my head around the 2 below statements being true for vaporizing a liquid into a gas: When a liquid reaches its boiling point the temperature stops rising (and any ...
LWilkinson's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
88 views

Peltier Thermoelectric Module - Water Cooling

My questions concerns calculations about a Peltier Thermoelectric Module for the cooling of water between an inlet and outlet. The Peltier water cooling module I am referring to is the following: ...
Johmi's user avatar
  • 1
3 votes
2 answers
3k views

Why does laser light not bend (refract) when it travels from air to water?

I passed green laser light from air to water but to my suprise the light doesn't bend towards normal even though I changed the angle of incidence.It goes undeflected ,Is it because of its higher ...
Sanjay S's user avatar

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