Message boards : The Lounge : Don't know where it should go? Stick it here!
Message board moderation
Previous · 1 . . . 16 · 17 · 18 · 19 · 20 · 21 · 22 . . . 38 · Next
Author | Message |
---|---|
Send message Joined: 12 Jun 09 Posts: 2103 |
I'm beginning to think the Sci-Fi documentaries on Sony Movies were wrong. I actually watched one the other day where a hole in the ozone layer caused really cold air to appear and instantly freeze people solid.Sounds like Artic Blast with Bruce Davison & Michael Shanks, a 2010 movie rather than a documentary. |
Send message Joined: 29 Aug 05 Posts: 15563 |
Bye bye SN11. Total failure. |
Send message Joined: 30 Mar 20 Posts: 418 |
Yup, that didn't go well at all..... Another SN failure, ending with a Kaboom. |
Send message Joined: 23 Feb 08 Posts: 2493 |
Since humans are composed primarily of water, and so is lake Utah, one cannot freeze the other. If the lake was cold enough to do that, it would have been solid ice so he couldn't have "fallen into it". Where logic meets physics. Try the First Law. Also observe the freezing point changes with dissolved salts. Include the temperature of air and the dew point. Things are never as simple as you wish. |
Send message Joined: 12 Jun 09 Posts: 2103 |
If you've already watched that, be worried that you're more like me than you want to be.Nope. If you googled it, you're a bloody cheat.Nope Computer/Films(J)/Artic Blast (2010). Along with several thousands more of all genres. As for the film itself, not too bad, but in my opinion, could've got a better actress to play his daughter. |
Send message Joined: 28 Jun 10 Posts: 2701 |
I don't have to look anything up to know that something at 0C cannot cool something at 37C down to 0C for a very long time, and it will never cool it to below 0C unless there's evaporation. So, no instant freezing. However water with dissolved salts in it can be liquid below 0C and so freeze something else. |
Send message Joined: 25 May 09 Posts: 1301 |
Oh dear, you are so, so so lacking in the basics of how refrigeration works. I could freeze you into a solid block of ice using water at 4C in an airflow of about 10m/s. Given enough water, or a higher air speed it might take a minute or so. (This is how some meat chilling systems work) |
Send message Joined: 23 Feb 08 Posts: 2493 |
Obviously never made ice cream or seen why roads are salted. |
Send message Joined: 12 Mar 20 Posts: 17 |
This is starting to become a bit of a rant. Perhaps it's time to end it. |
Send message Joined: 18 Oct 14 Posts: 1487 |
Oh dear, you are so, so so lacking in the basics of how refrigeration works. I could freeze you into a solid block of ice using water at 4C in an airflow of about 10m/s. Given enough water, or a higher air speed it might take a minute or so. (This is how some meat chilling systems work) This just comtinues a long established trend. |
Send message Joined: 29 Aug 05 Posts: 15563 |
I was watching a video about "The Secret of Synchronization" last night and in it they show how ice forms. Watch it from https://youtu.be/t-_VPRCtiUg?t=549, although watching the whole thing is really interesting. As are all videos of Veritasium. Anyway, ice forms not gradually, but goes from water, water, water changing to ice almost instantly. |
Send message Joined: 23 Feb 08 Posts: 2493 |
What air is flowing inside a lake?People and ice float. Then again if he hit play he might have more information ... |
Send message Joined: 23 Feb 08 Posts: 2493 |
Then again if hit play he might have more information.So 95% of him was in 0C water. That won't freeze him. 5% of him (not a lot) is damp and exposed to very cold air, too cold to cause evaporation. Where exactly is all that body heat moving to?What air is flowing inside a lake?People and ice float. Then again if he hit play he might have more information ... |
Copyright © 2024 University of California.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,
Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.