Jump to content
NEWS
  • In Universe Dateline: September 30th 2024
  • S4 server team member slips on carpal tunnel braces with the calm of a soldier prepared to die in battle
  • SUG Rebels gain legitimacy in Venezuela following several successful offensives
  • Skirmishes along Afghanistan-Pakistan border raises concerns about new flare up in the region
  • Malden defense forces intercept massive shipment of weapons and narcotics from Libya
  • Florida dad spends retirement untangling big mess of wires
  • Livonian parliament passes reunification law, US and Polish troops plan staged withdrawal
  • Man claims he was acting under Taylor Swift's secret orders after being arrested at NATO summit
  • THESE HEADLINES ARE WORKS OF FICTION INTENDED TO SUPPORT THE STORYLINES OF THE 3d MRB REALISM UNIT

Recommended Posts

Posted

oh jeez, here we go AGAIN

MSGT P. VAN DYKE

Reserves

3d MRB, Marine Raider Regiment

 

eKEH3cL.png

Guest
Posted

Water is not saturated with water, water is water. In order for an object to be saturated with something it must not be that object, bricks are not saturated with 'bricktitude.'

 

Wet is a state of being covered with water. Water cannot cover water as both are water, they become one object.

 

Ergo, Water is not wet.

Guest
Posted

We never get wet from water because it is a false sensory perception.

"Why is that Cpl VandeVord?"

 

morph1.jpg

Posted

Ok, first of all we need to understand what “wet” means. Wetting is a physical attribute of molecules, it depends on intermolecular forces and the physical (or geometrical) structure of the molecule.

 

When a water droplet is in contact with a surface, there are several factors that determine if the surface is wet or not. If the surface tension is broken, then the surface will be wet, as there is no force that keeps the initial droplet structure bound together.

 

Another factor that affects the wetting is how the fluid interacts with the surface. Is it a liquid-solid interaction? A liquid-liquid interaction? Intermolecular forces such as adhesion and cohesion determine the level of interaction between them. This is why the mercury inside a thermometer moves so smoothly, because the amount of cohesion (the force that links all the atoms of Hg together) is more than the amount of adhesion (what keeps the Hg bound to the capilar).

 

In a liquid-liquid interaction, such as water by itself, we can say that water is not wet, as molecules are all bound together and not wetting one another. In a liquid-solid interaction, like your finger touching water, the water will wet your finger, but won’t wet the other molecules of water.

×
×
  • Create New...