Building Objects With Water
kjeldor writes "According to this NASA article, an experiment conducted on water in space shows that a metal loop dipped into water can sustain a thin membrane of water (just like soap bubbles) in diameters up to 4 or 5 inches without breaking. This surface can be moved around, painted on, etc. without breaking. Apparently, with the absence of gravity's pull to break the intermolecular forces, water has the ability to hold together into a membrane in an unconventional manner. This may lead to some interesting future projects."
It is ironic that water in space exhibits properties similiar to what was speculated to derive from the delusional Soviet discovery of polywater in the late 60's. See here and here.
I wonder if there were any Russians scientists on board the ISS who said, "I told you so, comrade, I told you so."
Logic is not Divine.
I'm not certain why this is news - we've long known in the absence of gravity, hydrogen bonds (the cause of surface tension) can do interesting things, like causing goodly amounts of water to form a sphere. While it's interesting to see high school kids send such experiments into space (even those are absurdly expensive, and shouldn't be done more than once every five years or so IMO), I'm astonished that this is the sort of thing trained astronauts are doing out there on their expensive vacations. Gregory Benford, the SF writer and an advisor to NASA, wrote a very interesting column a while ago deploring the quality of NASA's "experiments" and the vast amount of funding for the ISS and the shuttle program (a reusable vehicle that costs $0.5B permission?!) that could be better spent on more promising projects.
Many people (scientists included) under estimate the significance of surface energy in day-to-day life. For example, crack a drinking glass on the counter top and measure the energy that it took to crack it. Now measure the energy it takes to crack it underwater and you will see that it is significantly and noticeable harder to crack glass underwater. Furthermore, the glass will rarely shatter underwatter. You may be able to notice a difference between cracking the glass on a humid day and on a dry day.
Well, that triggered a question in my head. Has anyone frozen a soap bubble? I'm in Austin and it's not cold enough now to do it. Can someone in cold weather blow a soap bubble in freezing conditions and have it freeze in the air? Damn. I wish I had thought of trying that when I lived in Michigan.
If tits were wings it'd be flying around.