5 Scientific Ways To Make Water Do Magic
Science has proven that much of the universe is made up of badassery. You can find it all around you, including in something as simple as water. You just need to know the tricks to unleash it.
So here are some badass things you can do with water that seem to cross the line between science and magic. And best of all, they're all completely safe!

OK, this one is incredibly dangerous.
This involves "superheating" water, by getting it way beyond the boiling point without having it actually boil. It's easier than you think, since actual boiling, that is bubbles escaping hot water, can only be achieved with a "seed" (say a point, preferably sharp, where bubbles can form). Normally, minerals in the water and imperfections in the surface of the container are more than enough for this to happen.

However, distilled water has no such minerals, and if you put it in a relatively smooth container and stick it in the microwave, the water can be heated beyond the normal boiling point and will remain perfectly still.
Then, you toss in an object in and watch it explode:
You're watching the boiling process happen all at once, in a fraction of a second, in a way that will result in boiling water flying back into your face. Do we need to tell you that if you must try this at home, to only do it with adult supervision and proper safety equipment? Do we really?

Because we have a feeling that no matter what we say, some of your are going to try this, and that at least one of you, for some reason, will do it nude.

Yeah, this one is also pretty dangerous. We're off to a terrible start here.
Remember that creature from The Abyss that was made of sentient, free-moving water? Well you can create a little version of that thing, and all you need is two adjacent containers of water and a bunch of electricity.
While this may sound far fetched, its actually quite simple. You see, to get the water from the cathode beaker to the anode beaker... actually, it's completely bizarre and we think the guys who discovered this aren't really sure why it works either. It seems to have something to do with electrical fields and the "unique structure of water."

But it does work, and apparently requires some mellow music in the background:
A guy with the chick-magnet name Elmar Fuchs, from the Graz University of Technology in Austria, discovered the phenomena. This was presumably while bored and playing with electricity and water, right down the hall from the "Fork and Light Socket" testing room. They found that he could create a free-standing bridge of water that could be stretched to a whopping 25 millimeters--not quite an inch (so don't be expecting water bridges to be the new rage in sky-walks any time soon).
Since electricity and water generally don't mix, in addition to the two beakers and water you may also need some balls as big as a bull elephant's. Or the brain of a garden slug. Either way we figure it's just a few years until scientists can make a water sculpture of Ed Harris.


Speaking of learning the magic of science via alcohol, here's the kind of trick they teach in Bartender School.
This one happens with the help of the only liquid in the known universe with more magical properties than water: whiskey. Pour a shot glass full of whiskey, and another full of water. Slap a playing card over the water, and turn it over on top of the whiskey, like so.

Pull the card aside slightly, and the water and whiskey, instead of mixing, will neatly switch places:
This does require some patience though, since the whole thing can take 10 minutes or more.

It works because whiskey is 40 percent alcohol, which is less dense than water. When the water glass is inverted and the card is moved to allow a tiny gap, the water trickles through, unseen. The whiskey, being lighter, is forced out of the lower glass into the upper. Scientists compare it to the jocks kicking the nerds out of the dorm in Revenge of the Nerds.








The "special properties of water" mentioned in the water bridge thing might have something to do with how polar it is, and that water usually likes to stick to itself, the same principle that makes toilets work.
ReplyOf course, I'm only a sophomore in high school, so it's really just a guess. I'm not completely sure how the electricity plays into it.
Another interesting thing about water: At the center of gas giants such as Jupiter and Saturn, water becomes so hot and dense that it completely ionizes. The oxygen crystallizes out and the hydrogen ions flow freely through the lattices. Such superionized water is solid, harder than iron and glows bright yellow.
ReplyIt has been created on earth by slamming water between diamond and heating it with laser beams at the National Ignition Facility at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
i wonder what would happen if someone drank superchilled water ... would it freeze inside their throats and choke them to death?
ReplyFuckbunkies.
ReplyWow! Could a clever person please explain number one to me?
Reply Hide All See All 3 Replieswell basically its the fact that ice needs something to form around aka it cant form around itself because it doesnt exist yet
Just watch Mythbusters
Just imagine the vibrating molecules slowing down when cooled. They just slow down. Now add some shake. The molecules change positions, allowing them the freedom to form crystals.
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I once did #1 with an entire minifridge full of diet coke (I don't like to go to the grocery store often so I buy it in bullk when I do). My roommate turned the temperature below freezing, and a few days later I heard a pop, open the fridge, and had to deal with large quantities of diet coke slushie. Apparently aluminum cans don't stretch well.
ReplyYou can also do 5 with cesium and a few other elements, it causes a reaction that can blow a whole bathtub apart.....with a few grams worth of it.
ReplyI've done number 1 by accident before (wait, that didn't sound right).
ReplyIn my case I think I had a 2 liter of ginger ale instead of beer.
I live in Minnesota, now I found a reason to live in this frozen wasteland.
ReplyI live in Minnesota. Finally, an upside to it...
ReplyI've noticed (with the Corona) that if you blow air into it before the crystallization effect begins to fully takeover, it will halt it altogether.
ReplyHow cool is it to know that the physical properties of water are only true in the right environment? When you think about the proper testing environment for things they have to be pure, and if you have distilled water in a perfectly shaped container, it will not boil or freeze. So water does NOT boil at 100deg or freeze at 0deg, it only does so if there's a seed, that's crazzzy
ReplyIt's the opposite. These special tricks works only in the right environment. If there are ANY polar molecules in the air, water will take them into solution. Water's a very Special molecule
That #1 happened with my Gatorade a few weeks ago. I was like "WTFFFFF" because it didn't freeze, so much as turn into some sort of weird jelly, instantly. And it tasted like crap. Don't try at home, kids.
ReplyoNcE YOU'VE READ THE.
Reply Hide All See All 5 RepliesFIRST WORD OF.
THIS YOU CANT GET OUT.
READ ON OR.
DIE TONIGHT AT 10:35...... P.M.9 years ago.
a person named Jerry got.
dared to sleep.
in a house that was belived.
haunted.The... next day his friends.
waited for him out.
side the house...................
They had
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him. They
went through every room.
exept the
attic.He wasn't supposed to.
sleep
there. He was supposed to.
sleep in the.
living room they went into.
the attic.
They saw Jerry's corpse and.
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scared. But that
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for making him.
sleep in that house If you.
don't send
this to 11 comments you.
will die tonight.
by Jerry. Example 1: A man.
named
Stewart Read this and.
didn't believe it.
He shut off his computer.
and went
through his day. That night
while he
was in bed he heard.
something outside
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look. And now
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named
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forwarding chain letters is like participating in the Special Olympics: even if you win, you're still retarded!
For the record, I would actually rather die a horrible death than pass on that chain letter. But I do plan on taking you with me
I got out.
You know, the least you could do is to actually format the chain letter properly. You're killing a bunch of people this way because all they're thinking is, "Aw, screw this, I ain't gonna read that shit."
And now their last names have become "Read". Congratulations.
Wait, so I'm going to die at 10:35 pm tonight, 9 years ago? s**t, I've been a ghost since high school. WHY DID NO ONE TELL ME?
Just a word of warning to anyone who doesn't know how painful boiling water could be, remember when that guy got into a fight with the giant guy in the punisher? Yeah? Good.
ReplyYeah that's incredibly helpful. You realize when you use an analogy or example to clarify a point, the analogy/example have to be clearer and more universal than the point
The only downside to the whole freezing the beer is that toy might just turn solid and break in your freezer.
Replythat happened to me last month, I forgot about it and the next day there was broken glass all over the freezer
#4 makes sense, water is really freakin' unusual as any biology or chem class will tell you, and the bridges probably have to do with the hydrogen bonds getting tighter due to electricity and adhesive forces causing it to climb the container. Still really freaking cool though.
ReplyIn the immortal words of scruffy, the janitor: "that holds up to scrutiny"
Live in north dakota i can do the instant snow
ReplySaskatoon, SK... GOML. And by "level" I mean "52°7' N"
Sorry for grammatical errors, but I was rushing.
Reply