Ice9
science
just science related topics. please contribute
note: clickbait sources/headlines aren't liked generally. I've posted crap sources and later deleted or edit to improve after complaints. whoops, sry
Rule 1) Be kind.
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I don't screen everything, lrn2scroll
Bokononist rejoice!
Psh, old news. This is ice19. But please no one drop it in the ocean. Just to be safe.
I see they've discovered my ex-wife's heart.
ex-wife: "sorry you're not hot enough, unlike the next neighbourhood chad"
That never pans out well (for her)
Oof. Sounds like you had a rough time of it :(
Are you Surtur?
And if towards its core that planet had two superionic layers of differing conductivity, as Gleason and colleagues suggest Neptune might contain, then the magnetic field generated by the outer liquid layer would interact with each of them differently, making things stranger still.
this is badass.. there might be multiple layers made of different phases of this superionic H2O "metal", which generates convection currents of this stuff.. Neptune and Uranus are weird inside..
Check out this planet shamer right here.
You’re weird inside, all gooey, goopy, and icky looking.
He aaid your anus was weird inside....
i draw the line at keeping multiple phases of metallic water inside you, brother.. that definitely makes you alien, and i'm pointing my finger and going "WTF", i don't care if that makes me a planet fascist..
holy shit now that is cool as fuck.
No, it's hot as fuck. Rtfa much?
More like high pressure af! Hbu rtfa much?
It’s called IcyHot and they have it at Walmart. Old news
man, the universe is amazing. very neat find.
I mean, at the extremes, a bunch of things start acting weird. Cool gas down enough and it turns liquid, heat it up enough and you get plasma (?), put it under enough pressure and you get liquid (?), send strong currents through materials and they start acting weird too.
What makes this ice though? the structure?
So if we can produce this, can this have a practical use like in freezers/coolers. Or even in drinks? How cold is Ice XVIII and XIX?
How cold is Ice XVIII and XIX?
Up to 5000K at up to 200 GPa. So to answer your question:
can this have a practical use like in freezers/coolers. Or even in drinks?
No.
You'd add one cube to cool down your tea and it'd blow up your house.
It's been a long day and somehow this comment really made me laugh. It's so perfect and dumb. I love it.
The benefit of ice in drinks is its coldness, not its solidness.
But if your drinks aren't chewy are you truly living?
Boba Fete
This is what low key genius looks like
maybe not, BUT we probably know what the God Neptune uses to make that big trident of his