Message from @🎃 Spookmaster Jaqula 🎃

Discord ID: 609926980347101206


2019-08-11 01:49:18 UTC  

Welcome to the Ice Wall!

2019-08-11 01:49:31 UTC  

Mind if u shut the fyck up

2019-08-11 01:49:47 UTC  

Just saying

2019-08-11 01:49:48 UTC  

Oof you getting banned

2019-08-11 01:49:48 UTC  

Rip

2019-08-11 01:49:49 UTC  

Haha

2019-08-11 01:49:53 UTC  

XD

2019-08-11 01:49:58 UTC  

U coming in on worst tumes

2019-08-11 01:50:01 UTC  

Times

2019-08-11 01:50:43 UTC  

@stud_udwin treat others with respect please.

2019-08-11 01:50:59 UTC  

Okay

2019-08-11 01:51:01 UTC  

its ok to disagree it's not OK to insult others.

2019-08-11 01:51:07 UTC  

But here me out

2019-08-11 01:51:11 UTC  

Its a bot

2019-08-11 01:51:32 UTC  

Are you all just here to shitpost?

2019-08-11 01:51:39 UTC  

No

2019-08-11 01:51:40 UTC  

No

2019-08-11 01:51:44 UTC  

Oh you were talking to Yeti, you're lucky he did not ice you.

2019-08-11 01:51:53 UTC  

@🎃 Spookmaster Jaqula 🎃 seems like the only serious perosn

2019-08-11 01:51:59 UTC  

Everyone else is 🤔

2019-08-11 01:52:04 UTC  

:0

2019-08-11 01:52:04 UTC  

Hello

2019-08-11 01:52:04 UTC  

Welcome to the Ice Wall!

2019-08-11 01:52:12 UTC  

Hello

2019-08-11 01:52:12 UTC  

Welcome to the Ice Wall!

2019-08-11 01:52:21 UTC  

*smacks yeti*

2019-08-11 01:52:33 UTC  

@Brian (Fourth Amendment) fight fight fight!!!

2019-08-11 01:52:35 UTC  

I came here to agree how the earth is flatter than paper

2019-08-11 01:52:46 UTC  

AINT IT

2019-08-11 01:52:49 UTC  

6


3
I always hear pressure defined as the force exerted by particles on the walls of the container they're being held in. This makes sense since the mathematical definition of pressure is p=FA. So, can pressure exist without walls to exert force on?

My understanding of pressure motivates me to think that even without a container, particles of gas in a vacuum could create pressure since their collisions with each other result in forces being exerted on areas (the areas being the surfaces of the particles being collided with).

On the other hand, a liquid in a vacuum could not exert pressure since on a microscopic level, the particles of liquid can't collide due to the cumulative strength of the bonds holding them together. @Deleted User

2019-08-11 01:52:51 UTC  

<:BigSmiles:556070613224259594>

2019-08-11 01:53:20 UTC  

Hey so im here as inspction too

2019-08-11 01:53:20 UTC  

Welcome to the Ice Wall!

2019-08-11 01:53:32 UTC  

Heard there was a very toxic admin

2019-08-11 01:53:50 UTC  

@Grumpy Bear can you demonstrate gaspressure without a container?

2019-08-11 01:53:50 UTC  

No one here is toxic without provocation.

2019-08-11 01:54:09 UTC  

Toxic enoigh that his toxicity started polution and global warming

2019-08-11 01:54:20 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/609927551153995795/IMG_20190810_174346.jpg

2019-08-11 01:54:24 UTC  

@Deleted User yes the atmosphere