well, it's summer, and I have my water frozen in a plastic bottle. I leave a bit of space so that I can pour some water in to make water cold so that I can enjoy cold water.
Just other day I randomly thought that shanking the bottle would make the water get cold quicker than just pouring it in and wait.
So, I did, it got cold fast, really fast. I thought it got cold way too quick.
Can anyone explain this? I mean is there an reason other than that water get good exposure (shaking causing circulation) to ice which allowing it to cool fast?
This has nothing to do with studying or anything but...
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simple concept of erosion my friend. For example, in santa monica, the beach just eroded tons after our storm - with wind, rain and waves, it sped up what would have happened over years in just a few days...
- money9111
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also depending on how hard you shook it.. you could have cracked the larger ice exposing more surface area, allowing the cold water to then erode the newly exposed surface...
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