Throw out your physics books!
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Throw out your physics books!
Physicists in France have discovered a liquid that "freezes" when it is heated.
This is really wild, a liquid that becomes solid when heated and goes back to a liquid when cooled.
http://physicsweb.org/articles/news/8/9/15/1
Mugzy
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- Heart Collector
Physics as we understand them now is still usefull, just not for everything. The universe is extremely complicated, and there will most likely be different Physics for different types of matter. There will most likely never be a "fit all, be all" type of physics.
We are still infants in this universe, and are just grasping the most simple of things. We have a long ass way to go. Hell, we don't even fully understand our own planet yet
We are still infants in this universe, and are just grasping the most simple of things. We have a long ass way to go. Hell, we don't even fully understand our own planet yet

i dont trust anything the french say.
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Yes, but your teacher should say something about it at least when he gets to explaining phases.
The paper (M Plazanet et al. 2004 J. Chem. Phys 121 5031) has been accepted and published in a science journal, which is no small feat. It is now subject to peer review, which means that other scientists will try to reproduce the results using the exact same methodology. If the results are reproductible, the discovery is now science and will quickly get included in new editions of college textbooks. High school text books are another story.
The paper (M Plazanet et al. 2004 J. Chem. Phys 121 5031) has been accepted and published in a science journal, which is no small feat. It is now subject to peer review, which means that other scientists will try to reproduce the results using the exact same methodology. If the results are reproductible, the discovery is now science and will quickly get included in new editions of college textbooks. High school text books are another story.
Chacal
[SIZE="1"][color="LightBlue"]Reporter: "Mr Gandhi, what do you think of western civilization?"
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[SIZE="1"][color="LightBlue"]Reporter: "Mr Gandhi, what do you think of western civilization?"
Gandhi: "I think it would be a great idea."[/color][/SIZE]
Originally posted by Chacal
Yes, but your teacher should say something about it at least when he gets to explaining phases.
The paper (M Plazanet et al. 2004 J. Chem. Phys 121 5031) has been accepted and published in a science journal, which is no small feat. It is now subject to peer review, which means that other scientists will try to reproduce the results using the exact same methodology. If the results are reproductible, the discovery is now science and will quickly get included in new editions of college textbooks. High school text books are another story.
Exactly.

- Keekanoo
"'...workers confirmed that the cyclodextrine ring becomes distorted as it is heated up to close to the solidification temperature. The hydrogen bonds within the áCD break and the hydroxyl groups rotate towards the outside, which allows a network of bonds to form between the different molecules.''"
Sums it up nicely.
Sums it up nicely.

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