So I read the article, and this is super cool. Basically what happened is that they let a drop of butyl alcohol out from a syringe onto the surface of another liquid, and it just... hung out there? For a very significant amount of time, too. In the past, this type of "droplet levitation" has only lasted a few milliseconds max, but this droplet was staying levitated without any external forces applied for tens of minutes.
The reason this happens is because of Solutocapilllary convection, which as far as I can tell essentially boosts the surface tension of that one spot in the underlying liquid using vapor molecules, so that the butyl alcohol molecule can't sink in.
Also, the reason why I specified that the reason this was cool is because it was done without external forces is that APPARENTLY we've been able to levitate things using sound waves since like... the 1930s. And it makes sense that you can do that, in principle, but it still looks absolutely wild to see.
leaving a three hour lab be like:
what time is it? why is it dark outside? where did the sun go?
I'm starving.
I'm never doing that again (literally has the same lab scheduled the following week).
“Culture”-ally stimulating art. Even mold can be beautiful…
by microbiologist Antoine Bridier-Nahmias
via Magical Contamination
The Good Place (2016-2020)
Remember, folks, never pay to access a scientific article. Use a site like Sci-Hub, or failing that, e-mail the authors and request the data you need. Elsevier and their ilk are hoarders and thieves of knowledge, and they don’t deserve one cent more. Poach and pirate away; it is entirely justified.
biologists will be like this is a very simplified diagram of a mammalian cell
chemists will be like this is a molecule
Stop the ban on blood donation of gay men
One of the funniest posts by a catholic on here I've ever seen