Thats actually the most applicable to glass you can get except for specialists. Polymer physicists know more about this than anyone else, but again... what is that second word...physics.... hmmmm... And if you really look into it.... phase transitions are thermodynamic properties... thermo is a physics topic. (although chemists try to figure it out with varying levels of success...)cleverlymadeup said:funny how i learned about the different states of matter in chemistry class not physicsManta173 said:I'm sorry but chemists are not experts on the states of matter by any definition. Physicists are.... and I happen to be well trained in both... chemical engineering bachelors and a masters in polymer science and one in polymer engineering.
Glass is a liquid.
and btw if you look quickly at wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass with many citations, it's stated it's a liquid
i'd go track down the pyscho clown cause he has a doctorate in polymer physics, which deals mostly with plastics not glass and ask him but he's a bit busy opening his store
funny part is glass isn't a polymer, stuff such as plastics, at least that's what my friend who has a doctorate in polymer physics did a lot of work with and most of the basic research you can do on polymer science.Manta173 said:Thats actually the most applicable to glass you can get except for specialists. Polymer physicists know more about this than anyone else, but again... what is that second word...physics.... hmmmm... And if you really look into it.... phase transitions are thermodynamic properties... thermo is a physics topic. (although chemists try to figure it out with varying levels of success...)
I was taught that Hitler sent everyone not Aryan German to the camps. This whole, they don't teach this shit in the US because it messes with our image is starting to piss me off.AndiGravity said:Well, they don't tend to teach children (at least in America) the Nazis rounded up homosexuals and sent them to the concentration camps right along with the Jews in the first place. Most of the people I know are very shocked to learn where the pink triangle came from.Papaya Melancholy said:After the allies liberated the Nazi concentration camps, all the homosexuals were sent straight to jail.
Kind of Ironic.
I'll add a bit to this, though. The man who cracked the Nazi's Enigma code, the breaking of which ultimately allowed the Allies to win World War II, was himself arrested and convicted for being homosexual.
There's irony for you.
Keeping with that theme in a very loose-linked logic chain sort of way, I'll throw this in the pot for obscure facts:
The last words of Socrates were "Crito, we owe a cock to Asclepius. Do pay it. Don't forget."
I don't see anywhere in my post that says glass is a polymer.... and as I mentioned before I have two masters degrees on polymers... I've done 5 years worth of research on phase transitions in polymers... so I kinda know this stuff. The reason why it mentions that in wikipedia is because polymer science has a lot to do with glass transitions... not real glass just the transition of a polymeric material from highly mobile segments to low mobility (think crankshaft motion). Gooey to pseudo-solid basically.cleverlymadeup said:funny part is glass isn't a polymer, stuff such as plastics, at least that's what my friend who has a doctorate in polymer physics did a lot of work with and most of the basic research you can do on polymer science.Manta173 said:Thats actually the most applicable to glass you can get except for specialists. Polymer physicists know more about this than anyone else, but again... what is that second word...physics.... hmmmm... And if you really look into it.... phase transitions are thermodynamic properties... thermo is a physics topic. (although chemists try to figure it out with varying levels of success...)
even that glass article on wikipedia said "not polymer science"
I'd like to point out that Thermodynamics is just maths with a little bit of physical intuition; anyone with a grasp of differential equations can derive it (if you mean stat thermo, then that's a completely different kettle of fish, but is still well understood by Chemists at least as well as by physicists).Manta173 said:Thats actually the most applicable to glass you can get except for specialists. Polymer physicists know more about this than anyone else, but again... what is that second word...physics.... hmmmm... And if you really look into it.... phase transitions are thermodynamic properties... thermo is a physics topic. (although chemists try to figure it out with varying levels of success...)
I'm pretty sure this is true about the bumble bee (the big fluffy ones), and so that is my contribution.LOOY said:It was physically posible for Dodo's to have flown, but they seemed to not realise this...
I knew if I tried I could find a chemist to piss off.... lol GO CHEM E's!!!Lukeje said:I'd like to point out that Thermodynamics is just maths with a little bit of physical intuition; anyone with a grasp of differential equations can derive it (if you mean stat thermo, then that's a completely different kettle of fish, but is still well understood by Chemists at least as well as by physicists).Manta173 said:Thats actually the most applicable to glass you can get except for specialists. Polymer physicists know more about this than anyone else, but again... what is that second word...physics.... hmmmm... And if you really look into it.... phase transitions are thermodynamic properties... thermo is a physics topic. (although chemists try to figure it out with varying levels of success...)
Whilst physicists may claim to know everything (or at least have theories), it is Chemists that deal with real world problems. Unfortunately, the movement of glass does not happen on any sort of time scale chemists deal with; I have to say the best people to ask would probably be geologists with the sort of timescales that are required(!)
Oh, and to the poster who said that 'Solids have a regular ordered structure', that's the definition of a crystal not a solid, solids may be amorphous.
Wrong!Manta173 said:A platypus is the only mammal that has venom...
Yeah I'll call BS on that one.Abolished said:-Moths are unable to fly during an earthquake.
Technically, bumble bees can fly. A lot of people believe they can't because their muscles (or what they use in place of them) shouldn't have enough strength to lift them. However, when put through tests by scientists/biologists it was found that they create small eddies in the air which help them stay afloat via pressure differences.The_woods_man said:I'm pretty sure this is true about the bumble bee (the big fluffy ones), and so that is my contribution.LOOY said:It was physically posible for Dodo's to have flown, but they seemed to not realise this...
So you're calling BS on that one, and not the one about the mime getting stuck in his imaginary box?Manta173 said:Yeah I'll call BS on that one.Abolished said:-Moths are unable to fly during an earthquake.