Message from @kino

Discord ID: 601601995069063187


2019-07-19 02:24:18 UTC  

and it tries to return to it's natural state

2019-07-19 02:24:45 UTC  

Somehow when we plug in the acceleration on earth and height of an object it can be calculated exactly when and where it will land but yet somehow you think things somehow fall with uniform speed

2019-07-19 02:24:52 UTC  

if you ask me why does water move out of the cell when the water concentration inside the cell is higher than the concentration outside the cell

2019-07-19 02:25:10 UTC  

funny i see it like osmosis when relative density is acting. but then in a vacuum, it starts to seem more like the energy transfer thing

2019-07-19 02:25:20 UTC  

i woulds say IT JUST HAPPENS OK

2019-07-19 02:25:27 UTC  

We dont know but its an extremely observable fact

2019-07-19 02:25:47 UTC  

Ive seen it under a microscope in an inclass demo

2019-07-19 02:26:13 UTC  

if you look at the density tower it also makes sense

2019-07-19 02:26:59 UTC  

cat, idk who said uniform speed

2019-07-19 02:27:12 UTC  

that'd be pretty crazy tbh, if things always fell with one exact speed

2019-07-19 02:27:36 UTC  

Yeah

2019-07-19 02:29:16 UTC  

i might be pushing this, but i think osmosis might make sense because, if you think of bits of water as a bunch of people in a room running around randomly

2019-07-19 02:29:41 UTC  

if the room has the same density everywhere, people will run and go within an area the same

2019-07-19 02:30:00 UTC  

but in high density places, more people would be leaving than coming in from the outside

2019-07-19 02:30:19 UTC  

No it moves like a vaccuum toward the salt/any other molecules

2019-07-19 02:30:44 UTC  

i think it's just gradients equalizing

2019-07-19 02:30:48 UTC  

Its descently fast

2019-07-19 02:31:01 UTC  

Yeah molarity tries to be constant

2019-07-19 02:31:04 UTC  

whether the "people" are water molecules themselves, or concentrations of salt

2019-07-19 02:31:21 UTC  

We dont know why it does though

2019-07-19 02:31:32 UTC  

im sorry dont things in vacuum all fall at the same speed

2019-07-19 02:31:40 UTC  

Yes

2019-07-19 02:31:40 UTC  

wait i think "we" do as in, they claim they do at least

2019-07-19 02:31:43 UTC  

regardless of weight or shape

2019-07-19 02:31:46 UTC  

and i thought i got it too

2019-07-19 02:31:52 UTC  

Yes

2019-07-19 02:31:52 UTC  

it seems like a statistical thing

2019-07-19 02:32:08 UTC  

similar to heat flowing in a material

2019-07-19 02:32:14 UTC  

Maybe

2019-07-19 02:32:16 UTC  

heat is literally defined as random chaotic movement

2019-07-19 02:32:21 UTC  

so that's why i say

2019-07-19 02:32:24 UTC  

but yeah, idk

2019-07-19 02:32:43 UTC  

like its flow can still be predicted

2019-07-19 02:32:46 UTC  

butyeah

2019-07-19 02:32:58 UTC  

I guess it makes the most sense but we wont really ever find out atleast soon

2019-07-19 02:33:34 UTC  

i thought scientists treated it like accepted too i guess

2019-07-19 02:34:27 UTC  

Yeah they take the most accepted theory and use it but really theory are given minor edits all the time to make it make sense

2019-07-19 02:36:05 UTC  

yeaah it's best to take everything with a grain of salt i agree

2019-07-19 02:36:18 UTC  

no pun intended lol but

2019-07-19 02:36:46 UTC  

Occasionally theyll have a revolution (i forgot what its called) and the theory is replaced

2019-07-19 02:36:59 UTC  

@raspberry you did not just do that LOL