A Conversation for Ask h2g2
Another Helium Question
Steiner Started conversation Nov 9, 1999
so here is my question to which i couldn't find an answer that is satisfying me: why does liquid helium II (or III i don't know exactly anymore) travel upwards the walls of a cup against earth's gravity ? i have seen it with my eyes but couldn't answer why it does so. i got some explanations in terms of quantum dynamics but this is just a formal thing.
Another Helium Question
a visitor to planet earth Posted May 6, 2006
Helium is lighter than air, so I suppose the helium would be changing into a gas at room temperature and so rise up the walls of the cup....
Another Helium Question
swl Posted May 7, 2006
You think so
This poor chap, I wonder how long he tormented himself with that question? Perhaps he died, not knowing. How terrible. We should all be collectively ashamed of ourselves.
Our Bad
Another Helium Question
Mrs Zen Posted May 9, 2006
Mmm. Better that way, perhaps, since the answer given was wrong. It has to do with how the miniscus behaves. If you look at a glass of water it is very slightly higher at the edges than it is for the rest of the surface. The same effect is true for liquid helium but more so.
B
Another Helium Question
Steiner Posted Aug 4, 2006
But isn't that surface tension, what you are describing?
Another Helium Question
Crescent Posted Aug 4, 2006
I always thought it was because one version of liquid helium is a superfluid....
BCNU - Crescent
Key: Complain about this post
Another Helium Question
More Conversations for Ask h2g2
- For those who have been shut out of h2g2 and managed to get back in again [28]
4 Weeks Ago - What can we blame 2legs for? [19024]
Nov 22, 2024 - Radio Paradise introduces a Rule 42 based channel [1]
Nov 21, 2024 - What did you learn today? (TIL) [274]
Nov 6, 2024 - What scams have you encountered lately? [10]
Sep 2, 2024
Write an Entry
"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a wholly remarkable book. It has been compiled and recompiled many times and under many different editorships. It contains contributions from countless numbers of travellers and researchers."