Thank you Mr Moebro.MoeBro said:heat is kinetic energy, increased movement of atoms in the heated region.
Atoms moving more means they take up more space, they expand.
The same mass of air in a larger area has a lower density than a similar mass of air in the original smaller area.
Less dense stuff is displaced by more dense stuff.
thus, hot air rises.
i hope that made sense.
Think about how much water goes through a kitchen tap, compared to a bathroom tap. ie: more water=more That's what I'd assume anyways. Plus you've got all the nasty food scrap loving bacteria thats a spout away from making UAN water yukky.up all night said:Why does water taste so much better from bathroom taps?
Maybe that's just me. And I don't mean public bathrooms.
MoeBro said:heat is kinetic energy, increased movement of atoms in the heated region
up all night said:Why does water taste so much better from bathroom taps?
Maybe that's just me. And I don't mean public bathrooms.
xcidium said:Thank you Mr Moebro.
Next question. Same topic.
What happens if you generate kinetic energy (heat, as you said) in Space? Where do the fast moving atoms go?
Also, another question...well not really a question. More a random stoner thought.
A mirror is just reflecting light, right? If I were to time how long it takes for the flashlight in my hand to generate (more) light to reach my eye, I would end up with a result of the speed of light right? Here are my questions....
MoeBro said:Going by what I know of physics, and no new, random crackpot theories created and accepted since then, light speed is a constant. I'm almost certain that it remains at its constant velocity regardless of whatever material it travels through, thus the mirror wouldn't slow it down. Not 100% certain on that though.
Newton's experiment
When a narrow beam of light strikes the face of a glass prism at an angle, some is reflected and some of the beam passes into the glass. All light travels at the same speed in a vacuum, but in transparent matter, Newton hypothesized that different colors (frequencies) move at different speeds. Red light moves more quickly in glass than violet light and it bends (refracts) less sharply. A triangular prism is shaped to bend the light twice, and disperse it as much as possible. The result is the spectrum of colors.