cross-posted from: sh.itjust.works/post/42205785
Sounds like a lot less cleaning in the house as it would just evaporate in less than a minute?
Submitted 1 day ago by loomy@lemy.lol to science_memes@mander.xyz
cross-posted from: sh.itjust.works/post/42205785
Sounds like a lot less cleaning in the house as it would just evaporate in less than a minute?
High humidity tends to ruin a lot of houses/construction materials over time, but you’ll likely first notice random spores
I mean you can just ventilate whenever you spill something.
The larger problem would be the entire water-based ecosystem.
Your floor would have to be supernaturally flat and level for that to happen.
the world is crooked ! reality is a lie !
is this show still any good? after roilland was kicked out for being a creep i mean.
You could also clean it by putting a cloth in the lowest point it would run to so this sounds like a win to me
i think without surface tension it would also just fall out of the cloth as soon as you lift it, because nothing would wick against gravity. in fact of your floor is pourous at all, i reckon the water would just immediately all flow further down and you’d be left with a dry floor.
Oil doesn’t have surface tension and it stays in the cloth. At a certain point it’s not surface tension that keeps liquids together but friction.
Says my uneducated ass.
Without surface tension it would stick to whatever thing attracts it more. And a normal piece of cloth attracts water way more than a normal non-carpet floor.
But it also wouldn’t flow freely as the GP expects either. Some oils have almost no surface tension, and they are famously a nightmare to clean up.
As a positive, the water would evaporate faster.
But that 2 micron puddle would also evaporate in 2 microseconds!
We would probably just not exist as liquids that want to hold together are pretty essential. Even if you just imagine blood not leaving your body through the tiniest nick.
Wouldn’t it just be a superfluid at that point? Those things are ungovernable. We’d have way more problems that just spilled puddles. They crawl out of the beakers on their own. It’d be an absolute nightmare.
I heard about superfluid crawling out of a container. But I wonder in this case, what works the fluid against the gravity upward the wall of the container?
Capillary action; which is a combination of adhesion, cohesion, and surface tension and for superfluids the additional ack of friction.
Unfortunately, if cohesion is removed from water, this might drastically change if the water can crawl up the container (the details would be based on the specific physics of this imaginary universe).
It even pass through cristal bottles, you can’t store it there. But it only exist under 2,5º K
It cleans not only your floor, but also the ceilings and floors of the neighbors which are living below.
cool
good news: it wouldn’t be
That’s how water works in videogames
Water just doesn’t work in minecraft
🤔
Would capillary action still work, or does it depend on surface tension? I’m thinking about superfluids. Would the water stop at covering the floor?
“Everything is coated with a fine layer of shit.” yourwildlife.org/…/the-tip-of-the-gutberg-the-wor…
Probably our bodies would instantly collapse into ooze like that guy in the first X-Men.
Assuming my home is perfectly level, which it is not
speak for yourself
In this case human dwellings would be built to accomodate for this, since it’s basically impossible to wipe up any water puddle. Builders would have to come up with some technology (drains in every room, floor heating as the norm to evaporate the 2µm water film etc.) or risk water damage. So you’d never have to wipe up a puddle since your apartment would have been built in a way that allows for the cleaning of water in other ways.
Technically even without surface tension, the microscopically small deviations in elevation in your floor, combined with evaporation and absorption would actually mean you would have a dry floor almost immediately.
What if each H~2~O molecule was coated in a hydrophobic substance?
Spilling liquid helium to achieve this.
The boiling point of liquid helium is -268.93°C (4.2 Kelvin)
AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works 1 day ago
Wouldn’t it evaporate in like 5 seconds, then? Also, drainage would be the easiest thing ever. Don’t even need a slanted floor.
ryedaft@sh.itjust.works 1 day ago
That’d be awful. You want the stuff in water out of your house, not precipitated all over the floor.
AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works 1 day ago
What stuff in water? Are you referring to drainage?