And I had to give up ; they just didn't my point ; my depth of thought is beyond their comprehension.
To bad really.
Mr river tell this wise guys some solids are liquids .
And I had to give up ; they just didn't my point ; my depth of thought is beyond their comprehension.
To bad really.
Glass is not a liquid. Glass is an amorphous solid.Carefull your will not break they will spill . glass is liquid.
Glass is not a liquid. Glass is an amorphous solid.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_transitionLIQUID DOES NOT HAVE A TRANSITION TEMPERATURE.
There is a lot of confusion around glass. There are even urban legends that very old glass windows are thicker at the bottom because the glass flowed over time. Not true at all.LIQUID DOES NOT HAVE A TRANSITION TEMPERATURE.
What did you got out of that with respect of that ? is glass liquid or solid ?
Glass is a solid at room temperature. The glass transition temperature or softening point of pure SiO2 glass is 2300 F.What did you got out of that with respect of that ? is glass liquid or solid ?
Glass is a solid at room temperature. The glass transition temperature or softening point of pure SiO2 glass is 2300 F.
What did you got out of that with respect of that ? is glass liquid or solid ?
Like river, do you also accept ghosts, goblins, Bigfoot, UFO's of Alien origins as fact?Mr river tell this wise guys some solids are liquids .
Why?I just wanted to throw a monkey wrench the argument " liquid "
And SciAm has an (old) article on it:There is a lot of confusion around glass. There are even urban legends that very old glass windows are thicker at the bottom because the glass flowed over time. Not true at all.
I have a pretty good source of information, my wife is a glass technologist.
That's fine, you just need to look somewhere else besides silica based glasses for your example. I am just supporting the wife's position.Look guy I just wanted to throw a monkey wrench the argument " liquid "
I thought glass was a very viscous liquid . I know what glass transition temperature is I used to work with polymers and characterizing them and Tg. was one of the analysis, I am also somehow familiar on how to momowe the Tg. in polymers. Look guy I just wanted to throw a monkey wrench the argument " liquid "
The issue that river cannot seem to grasp is that the liquid state is intrinsically a bulk property of anassembly of molecules, atoms or ions. The condensed states of matter (liquid and solid) only arise due to attractions between molecules, atoms or ion. Therefore, talking, as he or she has tried to do, about an isolated molecule, atom or ion being in the liquid state is quite meaningless.
How exacly does an atom become a liquid?Since both atoms become a liquid at extremely low temps.
How exacly does an atom become a liquid?
The liquid form of an individual atom? That doesn't even make sense.