Water-Only Thin Films In Space
If you've ever waved a bubble wand (or mixed some of your own with detergent, glycerine and water), you might be surprized to find that in space, it's much less complicated to form a film of liquid: all you need is water. The embedded videos are nifty, and render nicely in Mozilla.
Frift Proot!
In Mozilla? Now that would be news.
Too bad they're just animated GIFs, though.
There is some really interesting links in the comments.
I thought this early show stuff would allow us to catch them.
Obviously the SD editors aren't really caring about dupes or not. Too bad, considering it really degrades from the site. (And this is from a paying user.)
What is a zero-g beaker?
Can I buy one from Chemglass?
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.
In Republican America phones tap you.
Any liquid will do, even your own saliva. You mean to tell me back during your elementary school days, when you had a substitute, you didn't blow bubbles with your own spit?
I suppose, instead of disrupting class, I was engaging in scientific experimentation, at least to NASA standards.
"Inattention makes clowns of us all" -Bean
Dupe
-- Cheers!
You stole this comment from topologist (644470). Here's the link to his post in the original story: Hydrogen bonds..
the early show stuff is just the latest attempt to stamp out trolls on slashdot. fuck taco. trolls are often the most interesting/amusing comments on this site.
I wonder if there were any Russians scientists on board the ISS who said, "I told you so, comrade, I told you so."
I guess now you know what a dupe is, eh?
'fascinating patterns emerged--some that looked like spiral galaxies. "These tracer particle patterns lasted for well over four hours."'
'One of his paintings looked like an eagle, others like abstract art.'
Blowing bubbles, painting pretty colors on 'em?
Sounds like the first case of extraplanetary drug smuggling to me.
Obviously, Mozilla itself does not render video. That is left to plugins. That is forgivable.
Videos, however, do not render. HTML is rendered.
Furthermore, HTML does not render. A browser renders HTML.
Proper usage would be, "The HTML is rendered in Mozilla...."
Guilty as charged. I was testing a theory I had about duplicate stories. Pretty funny that one of the replies to my stolen comment is about the same as the original poster had.
In Republican America phones tap you.
SPELL CHECK.