No... after reducing surface tension of water it'll not be able to hold water. Real container's holding capacity doesn't depend on surface tension of liquid.
@@pareshborase4414 nowhere is what you said part of the definition of a container. Container: An item which can be used to hold other items or jeep them contained. Contain: To halt the spread of To check the expansion of So yes, that is in fact a container for liquid with surface tension.
@@sandortorres5739если в центрифугу отправить комочек земли вода на его поверхности заполнит неровности и весь предмет станет округлым, возможны деформации от эллипса до шарика и наоборот.
@@sandortorres5739 Really just said "let's apply a psuedo-second-dimensional rule to a fully three dimensional plane", of course something like this won't work in a three dimensional plane without copius amounts of effort to exact the earths gravitational pull, instead the more accurate way to see this is not as an application of level but instead an interpretation to the fluid structure and rule set water follows that allows it to find level on a shape unleveled. Water is amorphous, and the gravitational laws both philosophical and physically disagree with a binary notion of up and down.
This would be really cool to use for a reveal in an escape room. Write a code on a table using this method and have a cup of water they can be told to spill on the table, revealing the code.
Would be cool, but wouldn't last for sure. the hydrophobic part would reduce contaminents and you would be able to clearly tell a dirty part of the table and a clean part of the table. I'm pretty sure you would be able to just feel a difference too.
@@kickassnetworkWell, tbf escape rooms are usually maintained. Dunno how long the hydrophobic coating would hold up over time, but I'm sure just a daily wipedown would help a lot. As for the feel part, well that's just someone being observant. No reason to punish them there.
Democracy sort: Move the first item from the list to an auxiliary one, then the next item will be chosen by the nth item of the auxiliary list and the n+1th of the main list (making a midpoint on those). Repeat that till n = length of the main list, if it’s not sorted, paste the auxiliary list onto the main list and do the process again till the list is sorted
"You put water in a cup, it becomes the cup. You put water in a bottle, it becomes the bottle. You put water in a teapot, it becomes the teapot. Be formless, shapeless. Be water, my friend"
Isn't the question usually "still or sparkling?" I'm not trying to be argumentative and I know that flavoured water exists... I've just never heard it called "flavoured water."
@@er4795: That's exactly what I've been saying for a long time. How can controlling electromagnetism not be magic? You're literally controlling the deepest forces in the universe. Computer programming is spell writing.
Maybe paint the inside of a circle with hydrophilic paint, and the outside of that circle with hydrophobic paint, then see how manh water droplets you can hold inside the circle.
I wish people would stop with the whole "OH EM FUGGIN GEE!!! IM FAMOUS! THANKS FOR 2K LIKES!!!" If you really care about fake internet points, just don't edit it. I purposely disliked your comment because of the edit. If you want more likes, act like a normal person.
It would be pretty sweet to see this done in a reduced gravity environment. How tall could you get the water to rise? At what height would the square turn into a dome? Someone needs to do this!
ive watched every jschlatt sdmp stream but somehow totally forgot to watch the day 1 vod, i can’t believe how much i missed and how many jokes make more sense now
I usually like to carry my water in a star like shape, but airport security these days are like, 🖐🏻 uh uh thats a weapon... I then have to show them by chewing on it, its a whole scene by itself 😂
Thought: a drop of liquid dish soap weakens water's surface tension. So maybe there's something that strengthens surface tension? Then the bulging effect would be even more dramatic.
If you kept putting water in that hydrophobic square would it eventually make some 3D shape like a pyramid or would the surface tension break due to the volume of water at some point? (Edit: i said pyramid as a 3D shape example because at the start of the video the corners of the water seem to angle inwards, as well a pyramid is a fairly stable 3D shape, as most of it's weight is concentrated at the bottom)
It wouldn’t get that big although that would be awesome. It would be just like what happens when you try to fill up a cup with water and the water raises up out of the glass and doesn’t spill over at first but eventually does. It’ll go to maybe a millimeter or 2 and then break.
Consider that a... Uh, half of a sphere, I know that has a name but I can't think of it now (demisphere?) is a simpler shape than a pyramid, and that water droplets prefer round shapes, you'd get something like that but a square base... If the surface tension didn't break first, which I imagine it would.
This is such a cool idea for ant photographer to utilize (for any idea, like album art, family photo album highlights, promotional stuff, etc). Really cool and lends itself to lots of creativity
Turns-Into-Water Man defeating his nemesis's hydrophobic trap by discovering a bottle of soap in his tool belt would be an amazing Golden Era comicbook plot.
If I was still a college student in the art and design department, I will use this "water trick" in my Basic Typography class when experimenting with nature to create some sort of letterings. I'm a professor now (though not for typography but for visual culture) so, my days are long behind me sadly 😅
I appreciate your work I started RU-vid a while back felt like I had to lie to keep up with it and deleted it to just catch up to where I actually wanted to be. Felt irresponsible af. Keep calling folks out ✨👏🏾