Message from @rivenator12113

Discord ID: 610086274707226637


2019-08-11 00:30:14 UTC  

@washedstream your autism is showing

2019-08-11 00:40:52 UTC  

@washedstream coooooooool

2019-08-11 02:54:27 UTC  

Hello there.

2019-08-11 02:54:27 UTC  

Welcome to the Ice Wall!

2019-08-11 02:54:34 UTC  

Not you dang yeti.

2019-08-11 05:08:47 UTC  

Exactly, 21cat. Any force will work. I just tried to keep it simple in the gif. The stronger the force, the greater the buoyant forces. That's why scientists use centrifugal force to separate samples in a lab.

2019-08-11 05:11:09 UTC  

@washedstream I don't even understand what you're trying to misinform me.

2019-08-11 07:05:00 UTC  

@rivenator12113 I believe I have a photo that counters the one in <#484516084846952451>

2019-08-11 07:09:35 UTC  

Post it. Daily reminder that water does not curve

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/538929818834698260/610006886833586201/JIC1pcLA.jpeg

2019-08-11 07:14:46 UTC  

unfortunately I can’t

2019-08-11 07:14:52 UTC  

I don’t have access

2019-08-11 07:14:57 UTC  

I’ll ping you once I can

2019-08-11 12:19:39 UTC  

Is it water that does not curve or liquids in general? @rivenator12113

2019-08-11 12:19:54 UTC  

@rivenator12113 Water never curves? Have you ever seen water droplets or waves before?

2019-08-11 12:21:13 UTC  

@Akhanyatin Both, whats up you 2 responding at the same time lol

2019-08-11 12:21:44 UTC  

No liquid would ever me able to stick to the outside of something?

2019-08-11 12:21:53 UTC  

@SAM101907 Water in large quantities will always seek level, waves are caused by another force.

2019-08-11 12:22:27 UTC  

What? Re-phrase it please

2019-08-11 12:23:13 UTC  

I'm asking you if there is no way you could have liquid stick to the outside of a container or another object

2019-08-11 12:23:29 UTC  

Seek it’s level? You mean move to the lowest points? We even observe the oceans bulge due to tides.

2019-08-11 12:25:02 UTC  

@Akhanyatin I have no idea what you're trying to say lol...
@SAM101907 That wasn't the point, the point was that normal water not acted by any force should not curve.

2019-08-11 12:26:17 UTC  

oh wow i didn’t even know this place existed

2019-08-11 12:26:49 UTC  

Is there no way to have a container and, instead of the liquid being on the inside, you have the liquid on the outside

2019-08-11 12:26:53 UTC  

@rivenator12113 We still observe water curves due to Van der Wals forces, ever see a level before? Notice how that bubble used to make the leveling reading is curved?

2019-08-11 12:27:52 UTC  

@SAM101907 Did you even read my reply '' Not acted by any forces ''

2019-08-11 12:28:22 UTC  

ever heard of gravity my dude

2019-08-11 12:28:31 UTC  

it’s really useful

2019-08-11 12:28:34 UTC  

@Akhanyatin Can you just explain what you're trying to prove please. You're making no sense

2019-08-11 12:28:39 UTC  

Can you prove gravity?

2019-08-11 12:29:28 UTC  

@Akhanyatin Oh, unfortunately that wasn't issuing my main point.

2019-08-11 12:29:29 UTC  

In this video, you can see a liquid being held on the outside of a container

2019-08-11 12:29:56 UTC  

well there’s a core in our earth made of atoms neutrons and all that stuff and that core gives us the power of gravity by holding the globe together

2019-08-11 12:30:00 UTC  

@rivenator12113 Water doesn’t ALWAYS find it’s level, as I explained

2019-08-11 12:30:05 UTC  

that’s how any planet is made

2019-08-11 12:30:26 UTC  

sucky sucky

2019-08-11 12:30:29 UTC  

That's not proving gravity

2019-08-11 12:30:56 UTC  

@SAM101907 You're strawmanning again, I said water will find it's level as always unless an external force is act upon it.

2019-08-11 12:31:03 UTC  

okay well if you want answers try to reach a scientist instead of random people on the internet huh?

2019-08-11 12:31:17 UTC  

You can't prove it yet you believe in it?

2019-08-11 12:31:32 UTC  

well people believe in god and where’s the proof he exists