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William Ferriter

Why is glass transparent? - Mark Miodownik | TED-Ed - 0 views

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    If you look through your glasses, binoculars or a window, you see the world on the other side. How is it that something so solid can be so invisible? Mark Miodownik melts the scientific secret behind amorphous solids.
William Ferriter

Make That Invisible! Refractive Index Matching - Activity - 0 views

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    Recall what you observed in the "disappearing glass" demo. The stirring rod submerged in glycerin appeared to be invisible! In theory, if two materials have exactly the same refractive index, the light passes through without any (or minimal) scattering or refraction. The light travels straight because it cannot detect any difference in the two materials, hence the speed of the travelling light does not change (bend).
William Ferriter

▶ Instant Ice - Tips, Tricks, and Things to Watch Out For! - YouTube - 0 views

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    Pour a glass of water and watch it turn to ice instantly! This step-by-step tutorial will show you everything you need to know about Instant Ice.
William Ferriter

▶ Instant Ice - Waterbending In Real Life! - YouTube - 0 views

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    Want to make a glass of water freeze instantly on command? What is this supernatural power and who can use it? Discover the secrets to Ice-bending ... in real life.
William Ferriter

▶ Make a wax volcano | Shot on Mount Etna | Live Experiments with Huw James |... - 0 views

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    Huw James took a trek up Mount Etna and decided to show us what actually happens when a volcano erupts!

    With a little bit of help from Dr Suze Kundu and using a simple demonstration heating a glass beaker of wax, stone, sand and water we can see what happens when a volcano erupts.

    We can actually tell a lot about a volcano looking at the lava that comes out. If the lava is quite dense and thick we know it contains a lot of the compound silica. If it is less dense it has less silica and spreads out a lot more.

    Thick lava will generally erupt from one vent and follow one flow down the side of the volcano. Thinner lava, lava that is less dense, generally erupts from the surrounding magma chambers and flows in many different channels.
William Ferriter

Geology Kitchen #1 - What is a Mineral? - YouTube - 0 views

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    The video introduces mineral properties using common fruit and vegetables as analogies for these five descriptive criteria. The video also demonstrates the orderly crystalline structure of halite (NaCl) using a model made of food (marshmallows and grapes). Comparisons between common substances such as ice and glass versus the mineral definition are made to illustrate the specific nature of the mineral definition.
William Ferriter

How to make glass completely invisible - Live Experiments (Ep 33) - Head Squeeze - YouTube - 0 views

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    A REALLY cool experiment for showing kids the properties of reflection and refraction that uses Pyrex beakers, vegetable oil and Pyrex test tubes.
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