Submitted by OneTreePhil t3_yx9z3q in askscience
mfb- t1_iwp8462 wrote
Reply to comment by ShoulderToCryOn00 in What would the pressure be like in a body of water in free fall? by OneTreePhil
I don't think you can remove it carefully. At low pressure water boils, which increases its volume a lot and cools it until you are left with a mixture of water vapor and ice. That could be a pretty explosive process if you suddenly remove the source of pressure.
ShoulderToCryOn00 t1_iwq4hmt wrote
Thanks man. How could I forget about pressure lol. I had not even considered it for some reason.
Adventurous-Quote180 t1_iwq9qzf wrote
And what if we would do this in a hypothetical space that has no gravity, but has a similar atmosphere to earth? (Like maybe we would have a giant room filld with air, frloating in space, that has walls made out of some nearly weightless but strong material. And inside this box would we have tha previously mentiond water balloon experiment)
mfb- t1_iwqjfhj wrote
Then we get a ball of water with uniform pressure.
Or almost uniform, if we use 100 m and gravity.
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments