Can water be frozen in an airtight container? |
- Can water be frozen in an airtight container?
- Is there a single culture in this world where people have no names? if so, how does it affect their notion of identity?
- Why does overclocking a CPU make it unstable?
- How can astronauts see Cherenkov radiation?
- What difference does water temperature make on plants? Would a river of hot water have unique foliage?
- Is it possible that humans percieve colors differently?
- Does change in Gibbs free energy need to be negative for a nuclear reaction to be feasible?
- Why do torque and work have the same units if they represent different quantities?
- If a high wattage laser is invisible, you still need eye protection to use it?
- Is it possible for a substance to be composed entirely of protons, like neutronium?
- Would it be possible to create an ice engine which works based on pressure similar to a steam engine?
- Why do certain curves minimize time for a mass to descend? (see video)
- Is it possible to burn wood (or other biomass) as dry fuel in order to make electricity carbon neutral?
- Does light get faster when it is affected by a bigger gravity?
- Why is there such a thing as escape velocity?
- How many image combinations are possible on a 1000x1000 grid?
- Article on new plate tectonics theory. How is this different from what I learned in school 20 years ago?
- When someone recalls a sensation, what parts of the brain are involved?
- Will a bullet shot from a gun hit the ground at the same time an identical bullet is dropped from the same height?
Can water be frozen in an airtight container? Posted: 21 Jan 2017 07:14 AM PST The picture of the Coke pushing the lid up on the bottle on /r/all made me curious. If you put water in a container that left no space around the water and wouldn't break, could you freeze the water? If so (or if not), what would it do? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 21 Jan 2017 03:39 PM PST |
Why does overclocking a CPU make it unstable? Posted: 22 Jan 2017 05:57 AM PST I'm interested to know what physical processes make CPUs less stable at higher clock speeds. I imagine it might be similar to the idea of transistors smaller than 10 nm having issues with quantum tunneling. Why does the varying purity of the silicon (dubbed as the silicon lottery) affect how well a chip can overclock? Thanks! [link] [comments] |
How can astronauts see Cherenkov radiation? Posted: 21 Jan 2017 08:13 AM PST I saw a talk on space vessel design, and heard that astronauts in low earth orbit can perceive radiation visually through Cherenkov radiation, which gets generated inside the eyeballs' vitreous body (the gallert 'filling' of the eyeball). How and why does this work, and why does it not work on earth, only in space? (That part of the talk was mostly focused on low-earth orbit vessels inside the magnetic field, such as the ISS) [link] [comments] |
Posted: 21 Jan 2017 03:32 PM PST For instance, if a hot spring produced enough water to have a steadily flowing river, would its surroundings still be similar to normal rivers? [link] [comments] |
Is it possible that humans percieve colors differently? Posted: 21 Jan 2017 01:59 PM PST I have been wondering about this for a while now. Is it possible that each person see colors differently? For example, when I see the color orange, is it possible that my wife sees it as what I would call purple? We can both point to it and say, "That is orange!", because to us, it is our version of orange. But if I were able to see though her eyes, with my current perception of colors, it would appear to be purple. How could this be tested. Has it been tested? Any thoughts or comments? [link] [comments] |
Does change in Gibbs free energy need to be negative for a nuclear reaction to be feasible? Posted: 22 Jan 2017 02:55 AM PST Title says it all really but I could only find chemical reaction stuff relating to Gibbs free energy [link] [comments] |
Why do torque and work have the same units if they represent different quantities? Posted: 21 Jan 2017 02:48 PM PST |
If a high wattage laser is invisible, you still need eye protection to use it? Posted: 21 Jan 2017 05:50 PM PST If its an infrared laser, can it damage your eyes if you use it without laser protective goggles? [link] [comments] |
Is it possible for a substance to be composed entirely of protons, like neutronium? Posted: 22 Jan 2017 01:15 AM PST I know there's something called protonium where an antiproton and proton orbit eachother, but is it possible for a "protonium" to exist where the substance is 100% densely packed protons (or electrons or quarks or any other subatomic particle)? I know the like charges would repel extremely strongly, but with sufficient gravitational forces would it be possible? Also, in the event it is, how dense would such a substance be? Much denser than neutronium, right, since protons are denser than neutrons? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 21 Jan 2017 08:53 PM PST What if you had large container you could fill with water, leave it out somewhere very cold and let it freeze. Could the pressure created by the water expanding do meaningful work? Would it be possible to continue the process indefinitely with a source of running water & cold environment? Simply dump the ice when it's frozen and fill it up again to keep it going? [link] [comments] |
Why do certain curves minimize time for a mass to descend? (see video) Posted: 21 Jan 2017 09:07 AM PST Referring to this video: http://i.imgur.com/5t32VJU.gifv All balls have equal GPE at start, and at the end. Why does one curve cause the balls to go faster? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 21 Jan 2017 06:12 PM PST Some coal power plants do co-combustion with biomass waste products such as palm husks, pine, etc... in order to have a % of their emissions come from current carbon, thus have a lesser impact on global warming. If you grew some biomass to burn as a fuel source (not co-combustion), would it be carbon neutral if you kept replanting more biomass in its place? Could that be sustainable? I know that there are other environmental impacts from burning biomass, but I and wondering specifically about the impact on net CO2 levels. [link] [comments] |
Does light get faster when it is affected by a bigger gravity? Posted: 21 Jan 2017 12:14 PM PST So for example when Light is affected by the Earths gravity is it slower than when Light is affected by the gravity of a black hole? I'm just curious, because from what I recall Light from a certain distance would be faster at the Black hole than Earth. After thinking a little bit about it I thought that gravity doesn't need to affect the speed of light but rather the direction to make it faster the bigger the gravity gets. PS: I'm so sorry if you don't understand my question, because of the bad wording, grammar or spelling. [link] [comments] |
Why is there such a thing as escape velocity? Posted: 21 Jan 2017 12:02 PM PST Can't we just send something into orbit (or just straight away from Earth, for that matter) nicely and slowly? [link] [comments] |
How many image combinations are possible on a 1000x1000 grid? Posted: 21 Jan 2017 06:38 PM PST I tried doing some basic math with RBG (0 - 255) and came up with a number that seems way too small (1.658e+13). The idea that you can think of anything and it would potentially be in that image is mind-blowing. I feel like an idiot just doing (255 ^ 3) * (1000 * 1000). I feel like a better calculation would be something like (255 ^ 3) C 1000 C 1000. Not entirely sure, though. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 21 Jan 2017 09:57 AM PST So I read this article expecting to learn something new, but it sounds just like convection cells that I read about in elementary school a long time ago. What am I missing? http://www.businessinsider.com/what-moves-tectonic-plates-2017-1 [link] [comments] |
When someone recalls a sensation, what parts of the brain are involved? Posted: 21 Jan 2017 01:12 PM PST Essentially, when someone is remembering/recalling/imagining a sensation, such as a visual image or a touch on the arm or a smell, what parts of the brain are activated? If the feeling is touch, for example, does the primary somatosensory cortex get activated like it does when the touch actually occurs? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 21 Jan 2017 09:12 AM PST In my physics lecture yesterday, my professor did a demonstration where he used some equipment(I don't remember what it's called) that dropped a ball and shot a ball out perpendicular to it and they both hit the ground at the same time. I can't wrap my head around this working from shooting a bullet out of a gun. Assuming you shot it in a field where nothing will get in the way of the bullet. [link] [comments] |
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