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Comments(173):
Thought I was watching this for a minute. I look at the clock and realize that time had flown. Double check my internet history, and I had been staring at this for ten solid minutes.
WHY
WHY
#102
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jgk **User deleted account** (12/05/2012) [-]
Droplets break smaller and smaller and smaller...
Water molecules are polar, so each side is partially negative or positive. The weak attraction of negative and positive creates hydrogen bonds, so the molecules are constantly joining and breaking apart. Think of tons of weak magnets in a ball, falling apart and joining again.
#109 to #101
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jgk **User deleted account** (12/05/2012) [-]
>Basically Water has covalent hydrogen bonds.
>This bonding has an irrerugular distribution of electric charge.
>Oxygen becomes a fluffy negative electron center
>While Hydrogen becomes more positive due to the forces.
>The fluffy Oxygen molecules act as centers for more hydrogen atoms to attract
>The hydrogen being slightly positive is attracted the another oxygen molecule apart from their shared one.
>This is called Hydrogen Bonding.
>That shit is very very strong these intramolecular forces cause whats called the surface tension.
>Since sphere has the least surface area of all its the shape that water prefers.
>This bonding has an irrerugular distribution of electric charge.
>Oxygen becomes a fluffy negative electron center
>While Hydrogen becomes more positive due to the forces.
>The fluffy Oxygen molecules act as centers for more hydrogen atoms to attract
>The hydrogen being slightly positive is attracted the another oxygen molecule apart from their shared one.
>This is called Hydrogen Bonding.
>That shit is very very strong these intramolecular forces cause whats called the surface tension.
>Since sphere has the least surface area of all its the shape that water prefers.
Hydrogen bonds are not very very strong.
Water is able to flow because they're pretty week.
If the dissociation energy of a hydrogen bond is 12, the dissociation energy of covalent bonds is 400. But still they're stronger than dipolar forces and stuff.
Ionic
Covalent
Hydrogen
Di-polar
Water is able to flow because they're pretty week.
If the dissociation energy of a hydrogen bond is 12, the dissociation energy of covalent bonds is 400. But still they're stronger than dipolar forces and stuff.
Ionic
Covalent
Hydrogen
Di-polar
I ain't a scientist, but it simply has to do with the high polarity of water. Water looves to cling to each other, so the closest all of those molecules could possibly be to each other while still retaining laws of atomical physics would be a perfect sphere