Every time I park my motorcycle for a long enough, maybe like 4-5 days, I notice that the tire becomes a little flat. my tire was OK, no leak whatsoever. Is that even the case for mechanical equilibrium?
I thought alcohol thermometers were used for low temperature readings because mercury condenses to a solid at low temp. I still see mercury thermos being used instead of alcohol ones for high temp readings because an alcohol thermometer that would measure normal mercury thermometer temperature range should be huge. I'm not really sure where you got that 'because mercury is kinda toxic so alcohols are more used now' reason from.
There has been a push, at least here in the US, to ban mercury thermometers. Alcohol thermometers, IIRC, don't expand linearly with temperature as much as mercury ones do. Most of the thermometers I saw in the 90s had red liquid -- alcohol. (Nowadays we are going all electronic using thermocouples or infrared radiation.)
forever thankful for you brother but crying that it end at 3.2
Sorry....
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Every time I park my motorcycle for a long enough, maybe like 4-5 days, I notice that the tire becomes a little flat. my tire was OK, no leak whatsoever. Is that even the case for mechanical equilibrium?
Yes, but i think you have a leak. It's a slow one but at the same pressure and temperature and number of particles you should get the same volume.
Good video
Thanks. I am trying really hard to get all my notes in order before recording. I had to go back and fill in something I missed too.
I thought alcohol thermometers were used for low temperature readings because mercury condenses to a solid at low temp. I still see mercury thermos being used instead of alcohol ones for high temp readings because an alcohol thermometer that would measure normal mercury thermometer temperature range should be huge. I'm not really sure where you got that 'because mercury is kinda toxic so alcohols are more used now' reason from.
There has been a push, at least here in the US, to ban mercury thermometers. Alcohol thermometers, IIRC, don't expand linearly with temperature as much as mercury ones do. Most of the thermometers I saw in the 90s had red liquid -- alcohol. (Nowadays we are going all electronic using thermocouples or infrared radiation.)
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where do you think we are bro
@@ramezelprince1232 Nice to meet you
@@ramezelprince1232 very funny response😂
if two different sized objects, one 80 degrees and one 20 degree, will they reach thermal equilibrium at 50/50 degrees equally?
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