Isn't the Ideal Gas Law a law of chemistry anyways? ;)
Great now that stupid song from high school chemistry is stuck in my head.
"PV equals nRT...doo dah doo dah."
Can Anyone Explain This Odd Phenomena
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Re: Can Anyone Explain This Odd Phenomena
Psalm 91:2
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Re: Can Anyone Explain This Odd Phenomena
I am just taking a guess from what I know on working on automotive ac system. Introducing a vacumm on the ac system before charging the system reduces the boiling point of moistier causing it to turn to vapor and be removed from the system. I would then assume that would also reduce the freezing point as well. When the vacuum is then removed the boiling and freezing points would return to the normal tempatures allwing the water to instantly freeze. Just my 2 cents, not worth much.
Re: Can Anyone Explain This Odd Phenomena
IIRC it's very similar to superheated water that doesn't boil. If you heat or cool water evenly enough and in a container with little or no nucleation sites, the water can go below or above the accepted freezing and boiling points. With superheated water, a small shock can cause a "seed bubble" that causes a chain reaction and a lot of the water turns to steam instantly (which isn't good for the person who just grabbed the cup). The same thing happens when water is frozen without the formation of seed crystals.Dragonfighter wrote:Okay geniuses, I don't have film of this but a long time ago I had put several bottles of water in the freezer but a lot of them never solidifed. What was cool (no pun intended) was I would take one, just compress the side lightly and when I released it it instantly crystallized...it was like having powers. No one has ever been able to explain it adequately. Any takers?
FWIW, I got the ideal gas law. Been a long time since I even thought of stuff like that.
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Re: Can Anyone Explain This Odd Phenomena
Okay, that makes perfect sense. I preferred the temporary super powers theory though.7075-T7 wrote:IIRC it's very similar to superheated water that doesn't boil. If you heat or cool water evenly enough and in a container with little or no nucleation sites, the water can go below or above the accepted freezing and boiling points. With superheated water, a small shock can cause a "seed bubble" that causes a chain reaction and a lot of the water turns to steam instantly (which isn't good for the person who just grabbed the cup). The same thing happens when water is frozen without the formation of seed crystals.Dragonfighter wrote:Okay geniuses, I don't have film of this but a long time ago I had put several bottles of water in the freezer but a lot of them never solidifed. What was cool (no pun intended) was I would take one, just compress the side lightly and when I released it it instantly crystallized...it was like having powers. No one has ever been able to explain it adequately. Any takers?
FWIW, I got the ideal gas law. Been a long time since I even thought of stuff like that.
I Thess 5:21
Disclaimer: IANAL, IANYL, IDNPOOTV, IDNSIAHIE and IANROFL
"There is no situation so bad that you can't make it worse." - Chris Hadfield, NASA ISS Astronaut
Disclaimer: IANAL, IANYL, IDNPOOTV, IDNSIAHIE and IANROFL
"There is no situation so bad that you can't make it worse." - Chris Hadfield, NASA ISS Astronaut
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Re: Can Anyone Explain This Odd Phenomena
Phorget Physics. Super Powers forever!!!! 

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Re: Can Anyone Explain This Odd Phenomena
I suspect that when you squeezed it, you pushed air out, and that lowered the air pressure. Water freezes at different rates according to the ambient air pressure. Higher pressure means lower freeze point.Dragonfighter wrote: Okay geniuses, I don't have film of this but a long time ago I had put several bottles of water in the freezer but a lot of them never solidifed. What was cool (no pun intended) was I would take one, just compress the side lightly and when I released it it instantly crystallized...it was like having powers. No one has ever been able to explain it adequately. Any takers?
FWIW, I got the ideal gas law. Been a long time since I even thought of stuff like that.
Re: Can Anyone Explain This Odd Phenomena
Milk is white. Ghosts are white. Isn't it obvious?MedicMan218 wrote:I was getting a snack last night and after I poured myself a nice tall glass of milk I guess I didn't put the cap back on very well and it started acting odd....
Can anyone explain what was happening or is my milk jug possessed?
[youtube]http://youtube.com/watch?v=s_61pV8Pdbc[/youtube]