💎💎🔞👁🗨👁🗨👁🗨👁🗨22:22 Eu amo essa música,essa batida 🅛ⓘⓝ🅚 🅘🅽 🅐🅱🅾🆄🅣 15:15 Belíssima Sensualidade em cada movimento 10:11 Que coisa........maravilhosa ver uma criança 22:23 preocupado com a preservação da natureza! Lindo de ver!.....Parabéns Eve e Adam, Deus abençoe
For thosewondering, it's called supercooling. Basically water is below 0 Celcius, but it's still in liquid form. It suddenly freezes when there's an impact
الرسول صلى الله عليه وسلم قال عن شيعة علي بن أبي طالب: "يوم القيامة يأتي رجل من أمتي له جبابرة كأجبال الجبال، وعقلانية كعقلانية الأنعام، ورأسه مثل القمر ليلة البدر، يأتي معه سبعون ألفا من أصحابه بالسيوف مسلولة، والملائكة يحيطون به من أمامه ومن خلفه، فيقول الله: هؤلاء عبادي، وأنا ربكم، فيقولون: يا ربنا ما نريد إلا خيراً، فيقول الله: أدخلوا الجنة برحمتي، فيقولون: يا ربنا، وما رحمتك، فيقول الله: أنتم شيعة علي بن أبي طالب".
For anyone wonder how's it done? Freeze a Distilled Water for 2 hours, Carefully take it out make sure to not bump or hit it to hard to any surfaces before doing so, and when you feel like it. SMACK IT!!! Edit: I just got my phone back after it got thrown away on the pawn shop. TY FOR THE LIKEEEEEEESSSSSS!!!
@@Kingmaker78910 it's basically a clean water which have been evaporated and condensed into a clean bowl 🗿also there's a thing called Google and even tho I didn't use Google cuz I'm a science student but there's a reason why Google exist 🗿
I know there are people who don't know, but it's really very easy, that water is at 0°C so it is in a conflict between freezing or being liquid, and when it receives energy (or a blow) the particles begin to vibrate and solidify (it seems very complex but nothing to do with it xd)
I take it that the people replying with "🤓☝️" had to reply to this comment instead of simply browsing to the next and leaving this guy (who I'm grateful for explaining it) be
@@purpledragon5398 you can’t leave the water in too long or it will freeze in the freezer try for about 2 ish hours and it should work I do it for vitamin waters when I’m going to hike or fish on a hot day
I kept noticing a water bottle not freezing in the freezer after several days. I grab it to look at it and it turned from liquid to solid in an nth of a second, it was so weird.
Its called super cooling, it works because ice needs a catalyst to crystallize. The ice and the shock creates the catalyst for crystals to form causing it to freeze and turn into a slushie. Yoy can di the same woth sodas, search it up
@@AGuyStoleMyWaffles Oversimplification but basically, the crystals "forget" to freeze the water. It's a gross oversimplification but I think you get the idea. The water should freeze at this temperature but due to certain unique properties of water, it doesn't unless you artificially create a crystallisation point. There are better videos out there that explains this phenomenon.
This is called supercooling. You can bring liquids below their freezing point without them becoming a solid as long as nothing agitates them and causes crystallization. This also works for things like sodium acetate heat packs. Where the freezing point is way higher, 140 degrees fahrenheit. When you boil sodium acetate and bring it above 140 F it becomes a liquid. As it cools down to room temperature it will remain a liquid due to supercooling. When you agitate it the temperature rises to the freezing point of the liquid which creates heat. Chemistry is wild.
This is called supercooling. When you freeze water for a certain amount of time (2 hr & 45min), it will just begin to form ice crystals. But these ice crystals “forget” to freeze the water. Causing this phenomenon. THAT’S A LOT OF LIKES!
That is distilled water. Distilled water is missing something that water needs so it can freeze called sediment. Without this ice crystals won't for unless certain conditions are happening like hitting the bottle or placing something cold on it
The random water you’re throwing into your fridge is purified water, that’s not random, the point is mineral water won’t work, or it won’t work as well. Distilled water has the least minerals, great for diffusers and ironing with, but your body needs minerals.
Distilled or not, what is happening here is surfusion, where the water’s temperature is below 0C, but it isn’t freezing yet. It can work with both distilled, mineral or purified water.
Water straight from the tap isn't "purified" and has chlorine, fluoride and whatnot, yet it still slushifies so there goes ur purified/distilled water argument🤡🤣
Para que ocurra es necesario utilizar agua destilada. Las moléculas de agua reducen su movimiento (temperatura). No obstante, permanecen quieras y no pueden reordenar se para formar los cristales de hielo. Cualquier perturbación incluyendo introducir algo, existencia de sales o un impacto movería las moléculas de tal forma que alguna forme un cristal de hielo y perturbe al resto obligándoles a formar hielo. Es... Fascinante
Like someone else said, this is called super cooling. It’s when the water is below 0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit. But it usually happens in only distilled water, because of its purity. It is possible with tap water, but it’s pretty difficult to do.
That only works on distilled water though If I remember right, because ice crystals have no origin to base on, and hence, not freezing. I might be incorrect though.