Thin Water Acts Like a Solid
Roland Piquepaille writes "What happens when you compress water in a nano-sized space? According to Georgia Tech physicists, water starts to behave like a solid. "The confined water film behaves like a solid in the vertical direction by forming layers parallel to the confining surface, while maintaining it's liquidity in the horizontal direction where it can flow out," said one of the researchers. "Water is a wonderful lubricant, but it flows too easily for many applications. At the one nanometer scale, water is a viscous fluid and could be a much better lubricant," added another one."
Well, based on poor results getting it on in a swimmin pool, I can verify that water is a lousy lubricant at normal scale!
But cold water also acts like a solid at times.
The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
...it's called prison lube.
I can't believe the popular notions of water in a nano-sized channel are false! Soon they'll be saying that the attorney general acts like a solid under pressure in a nano-sized tube. If we can't believe the popular notions of nano-tube water behavior, what can we believe? My life is a lie!
Oh my god I can't believe I actually read that as "I Am Not A Scientist But I Play One On TV". . . .
Be back soon guys . . . I'm gonna go outside for a while.
I think he has hi's possessives right.
rj
Turns out some guy in the middle east figured this out a couple of millennia ago. They called him the Nazarene or something; apparently even did some tricks where he walked on the stuff. Once again, slashdot is just recycling old news.