Simply speaking, it's not amazing in the least. It's a well known phenomenon.
It all has to do with air pressure. The heated flask has less air pressure due to the heated air inside. As it cools, in the water, the air condenses causing an area of less pressure (essentially a partial vacuum). The difference in air pressure inside the flask to the air outside it, causes the water to raise up due to the pressure of the outside air, compared to the pressure inside. It's an old experiment.
It all has to do with air pressure. The heated flask has less air pressure due to the heated air inside. As it cools, in the water, the air condenses causing an area of less pressure (essentially a partial vacuum). The difference in air pressure inside the flask to the air outside it, causes the water to raise up due to the pressure of the outside air, compared to the pressure inside. It's an old experiment.
Sorry just being picky. There is such a thing as suction, this is an example. The point is suction is the flow of something from a region of high pressure to a region of low pressure. Both regions exert pressure opposing the fluid but one has greater magnitude than the other. In this case the water rises dispite the pressure in the flask not because of it. If the gas was cooled in a completely sealed flask(jar) then nothing could "fill the space". The pressure would still decrease inside though.
As for why it farted, the surface of the water (outside the flask) is at atmospheric pressure. The liquid inside the flask (above the outside surface) is therefore at lower pressure. Things get forced from high pressure regions to low pressure regions, but air cant penetrate the surface of the water because the pressure increases the deeper it gets. When the flask is tilted a small amount of liquid will flow out and the lower pressure liquid will be exposed. Air loves it and rushes in...possibly
i agree with christop2005, when the hot air inside the flask condensed, it creates some vacuum environment inside the flask, therefore sucks the liquid in.
so this is called the blood of the lamb magenta also close to indigo
so your going from the primary color torch blue flame to the glass
red blood im assuming in the container turns to blue as it rised then has bed on top you took the blue water from the top red energy back to the red in the container so your missing ice you got your colors right
but it goes blue ice red flame blue torch or blue torch red flame blue ice so figure a way to get ice in there you have a big as power source
yes I know what you did that was fucking cool as shit you made a supper conductor
charged the glass with energy stuck it in the ground wich is the unified feild of water
then took the energy back from the top using the water you poured on top then when you touched it you took all the energy back from the bottom fluid to the top so you completed the whole loop of antigravity now do it with frequency
Hey, check-out my videos...is a model about how i believe gravity works...you are on the right way...thanks for share your experiments...i've also some home made experiments on my channel, hope you enjoy...be in peace man...:-)
There's not enough characters in youtube for me to explain fully what happens here but basically the heated flask has fewer air particles than a room temperature flask. When the flask cools it creates a suction.
But someone will read my post and tell me I'm wrong but I assure you, that's what's happening here.
ya, you're right, but maybe i can explain it better.
there are less particles in the heated flask because heated particles are farther apart. so when the flask cools off, the particles move closer together. since the particles are getting closer, the bottle needs to be filled with something, so it pulls the water up into the flask =]
i understood you, but it wouldnt make sense to some =]
@LordROSFH Actually the water is not pulled up. As the air in the flask cools the particles slow down exerting less pressure on the water. As the air pressure acting on the rest of the waters surface is constant the difference in pressure has the knock on effect of pushing the water up. The significant force is the electron-electron repulsion - pushing. Gravity - a pulling force does have an effect in that it allows an atmosphere, and also the weight of the column of water restores equilibrium.
@lfo98 being that there is no such thing as suction, wouldnt you agree that my description would accurately be described as what the ideal situation of "suction" would be if it were to exist?
anyway, you are right the water is what is rushing in, but wouldnt you agree that it it is being pulled in, in order to accomadate for the difference in pressure?basically something needs to fill that space that is being made, now that the water is the only substance available that it would fill that space
@chantaclear When he heats the vial, the gas inside expands. Then when he places the vial over the tub, the gas inside cools off, so it contracts. When it contracts, the pressure inside the vial drops. At that point the pressure outside the vial is greater than the pressure inside the vial, so whatever is outside of the vial gets pushed inside.
What.The.Fuck.....
xXTEDXx 7 months ago
HAHA... it farted
jack97613 7 months ago
it farted, wow..?! xDDD
HardDrumStep 9 months ago
O.o Water can make MUSIC? >___<
vampireth101 10 months ago
He TOOTED! what a NERDDDDDDDDD
iheartaron98 11 months ago
Simply speaking, it's not amazing in the least. It's a well known phenomenon.
It all has to do with air pressure. The heated flask has less air pressure due to the heated air inside. As it cools, in the water, the air condenses causing an area of less pressure (essentially a partial vacuum). The difference in air pressure inside the flask to the air outside it, causes the water to raise up due to the pressure of the outside air, compared to the pressure inside. It's an old experiment.
UnderManiac 1 year ago
It all has to do with air pressure. The heated flask has less air pressure due to the heated air inside. As it cools, in the water, the air condenses causing an area of less pressure (essentially a partial vacuum). The difference in air pressure inside the flask to the air outside it, causes the water to raise up due to the pressure of the outside air, compared to the pressure inside. It's an old experiment.
UnderManiac 1 year ago
1:10 sound like fart
thevideoman6 1 year ago
good but say everything properl;y
ajubieber123 1 year ago
Um, expanding & contracting gases through heat & cold. ok and the point is what with gravety?
11111111jws 1 year ago
Sorry just being picky. There is such a thing as suction, this is an example. The point is suction is the flow of something from a region of high pressure to a region of low pressure. Both regions exert pressure opposing the fluid but one has greater magnitude than the other. In this case the water rises dispite the pressure in the flask not because of it. If the gas was cooled in a completely sealed flask(jar) then nothing could "fill the space". The pressure would still decrease inside though.
lfo98 1 year ago
As for why it farted, the surface of the water (outside the flask) is at atmospheric pressure. The liquid inside the flask (above the outside surface) is therefore at lower pressure. Things get forced from high pressure regions to low pressure regions, but air cant penetrate the surface of the water because the pressure increases the deeper it gets. When the flask is tilted a small amount of liquid will flow out and the lower pressure liquid will be exposed. Air loves it and rushes in...possibly
lfo98 1 year ago
it farted
gwot 1 year ago
IS tht how farting works? coz it really does sound like my grandma taking a potty:P
ultranoone 1 year ago
Hot air condenses when it cools, creating a low-pressure area inside the flask.
This causes water to be drawn upwards inside the flask.
The weight of the water, and the vacuum (static head) inside the top of the flask prevent the water from falling back down.
This is why air is sucked inside when he tilts it.
Sm0ky2 1 year ago
what are the materials and procedures?????????
i need the answer now for my homework
tnx in adnce
uqopew 1 year ago
i agree with christop2005, when the hot air inside the flask condensed, it creates some vacuum environment inside the flask, therefore sucks the liquid in.
samuel91222 1 year ago
The Bible
Tripple heat everything
Blood indigo blood L bends light earth
Basic instructions before leaving earth
MrCletushowell 1 year ago
so this is called the blood of the lamb magenta also close to indigo
so your going from the primary color torch blue flame to the glass
red blood im assuming in the container turns to blue as it rised then has bed on top you took the blue water from the top red energy back to the red in the container so your missing ice you got your colors right
but it goes blue ice red flame blue torch or blue torch red flame blue ice so figure a way to get ice in there you have a big as power source
MrCletushowell 1 year ago
yes I know what you did that was fucking cool as shit you made a supper conductor
charged the glass with energy stuck it in the ground wich is the unified feild of water
then took the energy back from the top using the water you poured on top then when you touched it you took all the energy back from the bottom fluid to the top so you completed the whole loop of antigravity now do it with frequency
MrCletushowell 1 year ago
what are the materials and proceduresssssssss
mascomfartable 1 year ago
I wonder how hot the flask was.
djd904 1 year ago
@djd904 must have been very hot as he used a cloth to lift it plus it was over a bunsen burner
93stephenbarr 1 year ago
Hey, check-out my videos...is a model about how i believe gravity works...you are on the right way...thanks for share your experiments...i've also some home made experiments on my channel, hope you enjoy...be in peace man...:-)
FelipeZucchetti 1 year ago
Comment removed
augustuscoletrain 2 years ago
There's not enough characters in youtube for me to explain fully what happens here but basically the heated flask has fewer air particles than a room temperature flask. When the flask cools it creates a suction.
But someone will read my post and tell me I'm wrong but I assure you, that's what's happening here.
christoph2005 2 years ago 12
ya, you're right, but maybe i can explain it better.
there are less particles in the heated flask because heated particles are farther apart. so when the flask cools off, the particles move closer together. since the particles are getting closer, the bottle needs to be filled with something, so it pulls the water up into the flask =]
i understood you, but it wouldnt make sense to some =]
LordROSFH 2 years ago 10
@LordROSFH Actually the water is not pulled up. As the air in the flask cools the particles slow down exerting less pressure on the water. As the air pressure acting on the rest of the waters surface is constant the difference in pressure has the knock on effect of pushing the water up. The significant force is the electron-electron repulsion - pushing. Gravity - a pulling force does have an effect in that it allows an atmosphere, and also the weight of the column of water restores equilibrium.
lfo98 1 year ago
@lfo98 being that there is no such thing as suction, wouldnt you agree that my description would accurately be described as what the ideal situation of "suction" would be if it were to exist?
anyway, you are right the water is what is rushing in, but wouldnt you agree that it it is being pulled in, in order to accomadate for the difference in pressure?basically something needs to fill that space that is being made, now that the water is the only substance available that it would fill that space
LordROSFH 1 year ago
@christoph2005 So it's air pressure?
chantaclear 7 months ago
@chantaclear Yes, it is the outside air pressure being higher than the pressure inside the flask.
The air outside is pushing the material into the flask.
christoph2005 7 months ago
@christoph2005 Wait no, it's just expansion, right?
chantaclear 7 months ago
@chantaclear When he heats the vial, the gas inside expands. Then when he places the vial over the tub, the gas inside cools off, so it contracts. When it contracts, the pressure inside the vial drops. At that point the pressure outside the vial is greater than the pressure inside the vial, so whatever is outside of the vial gets pushed inside.
christoph2005 7 months ago
What was the liquid this in this red can...???
panonian13 2 years ago
human blood
Splooshiba 2 years ago
look at 1:12 :P
jyjyjyjyjy123 2 years ago