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It thus takes the shape of a pancake (again) but this time, the drop is in midair. This phenomenon is different to a drop falling on other surfaces as in this case, the drop crashes on the surface leaving only a small quantity of the water to bounce up. Physicists have also found out that the actual speed of a drop influences its deformation but not the time taken for it to get in contact with the surface. Article: Do you know what happens when a drop of water hits a non-absorbent surface? Yeah you’re right (if you don’t have the answer, please re-read the title of this column), the drop echo upwards. A French scientific team from the Collēge de France have studied the scene sparingly with a concave lens that took 40000 images per second. Here are the results: At first, when it hits the surface, the drop flattens. Then, it signal up due to the movement energy it had when falling down. The drop will continue going upwards eventually taking the shape of a needle. Afterwards, the drop falls upon itself, into itself. It thus takes the shape of a pancake (again) but this time, the drop is in midair. This phenomenon is different to a drop falling on other surfaces as in this case, the drop crashes on the surface leaving only a small quantity of the water to trip up. Physicists have also found out that the realized speed of a drop influences its deformation but not the time taken for it to get in contact with the surface. This veritably depends upon the mass of the drop. Anyway why is all this stuff important anyway? Scientists swear by that this find may be of interest to the industry. There’s a small illustration: Imagine not seeing droplets of rain on your car’s windscreen when it is in fact raining cats and dogs outside. Cool, isn’t it? Well this may well be possible with these new data obtained by the scientists from the Collēge de France. How though? Easy enough! The period of contact of the raindrops with the windscreen is so minimal that the driver does not even see them! Water drops bounce like springs, would you ever have thought of this? No, I’m not sure you would.
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Advice Home Business Technology Online Advertising Motivational Internet Marketing SEO Help Online Games Science Articles Happiness More Articles:1. Issues with Aerial Fire Fighting By Lance Winslow Summary: It was very red, highly toxic to plant life but certainly would do it's job when put on top of a fire or in the path of one.I have always pondered the methods of fire fighting by air and the possible future fighting methods with UAVs, robots in combination with a national forest policy which would allow some smaller fires to burn their course and others Article: A few years ago I visited the Wyoming Contractor, which used WWII conveyance to fight such fires. I was dumbstruck that such … 2. Modification of Earth and Humans By Lance Winslow Summary: If we fail to modify our planet to serve at our needs, well then we must modify ourselves, through genetic manipulation, mitochondrion DNA and breeding to bring out the factors needed to sustain human life in the population concentrations of the future, which will go on.Mankind seems to be unable to control the need to procreate and therefore such an option wArticle: As we see in the movies and genres of consumptive events prevalent depicted in images on the silver screen we can unders… 3. The why behind `1+1=2 Summary: Although I only received one reply ' which came from Dr. Brad Carter of the University of Southern Queensland, thanks to thee ' I knew that the answer that I was provided with matched (and even overlapped ' see below) my original idea upon this complex question of why 1 and 1 makes 2.My original thoughts were roughly as stated below:'Somebody wanted to give the number '1' the name 'one.' He also wanted to give the number '2' the name 'two'. The best part of it though is if a question ha… 4. Accurate Pre-Neolithic Calendars Summary: Braden is quite wrong when he says the initiations to this knowledge began about two thousand years ago. It certainly is very old and would have taken someone or a culture a long time to get to the point of this highly complex prophetic calendar that was as astronomically correct as early 20th Century calendars. When Marshack wrote about the Le Placard baton in 1991 he was erring on the side of conservatism by saying it was from at least 15,000 BC. I summarize the 'decoding' since it wa… |
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