Scientists Make Water Run Uphill
redshadow01 writes to mention a BBC story about scientists flouting the laws of physics for fun, and profit. From the article: "The US scientists did the experiment to demonstrate how the random motion of water molecules in hot steam could be channelled into a directed force. But the team, writing in Physical Review Letters, believes the effect may be useful in driving coolants through overheating computer microchips."
Scientists also noticed the older water samples flowed uphill, both ways.
In the snow.
There's nothing Intelligent about Intelligent Design.
So what, they've been doing that at Knott's house of mystery for the past like what, 20 years?
I know how to make water travel uphill:
Step 1: Stand up.
Step 2: Find an incline.
Step 3: Walk up said incline.
Warning: Step 1 and Step 3 should not be performed by anyone who even knows how to properly type in the URL to this website without first consulting a physician. Doing so may cause undesired effects such as loss of breath and/or time spent away from the internet.
Ginga no Rekshiya Mata Each page.
1. Flaunting the laws of physics
2. ???
3. Profit!
Yes, I am the one with the legendary sig.
Too bad only intel CPU's run hot enough for steam cooling to be viable.
Has Maxwell's demon been discovered?
I pretend to know more than I really do by mooching off google and wikipedia.
Now if they could find a way to do the same with shit.
The US scientists did the experiment to demonstrate how the random motion of water molecules in hot steam could be channelled into a directed force
Thats so awesome! Maybe we can use that force push trains or something!
No discussion of water flowing uphill can go without mention of M.C. Escher's Waterfall and Dyson's fantastic real world recreation (and there's a good explanation of Dyson did it at the BBC.
There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
Whitesides made water run uphill 14 years ago! He used a different "trick" though: he made a surface that was very hydrophobic on one side, and very hydrophilic on the other. A drop of water feels this gradient and moves towards the hydrophilic side, even if it happens to be uphill. The energy comes from the surface tension of the drop (it relaxes as it moves).
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1992Sci...256.1539C
How about a self recycling dam? After the water creates energy going down you push it back up and do it again. Maybe even you can get some engery from moving it up. This is all assuming that you gain more energy than you're losing with this method.
Look up the Second Law of Thermodynamics and get back to me on that.
Cheers,
~Rebecca
Here I was, thinking that scientists have found a way to make rivers bring water to parched land where irrigation could help make the land more productive for starving nations,
and all we have are some serious overclockers.
I'd hate to be at a LAN party with these guys.
WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
Incidentally, this news dates from the end of 2005 - so slashdot is running 4/5 months behind the times.