- #1
Entanglement
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- 13
Some fluid act weirdly at zero kelvin like Helium
1- it loses viscosity
2- flows upwards along the wall against gravity !
And there is a property I'm not sure about, that it can't be held in a container because it leaks out of it.
However what's the physical explanation for all of that what really happens to the fluid at zero kelvin at the atomic level to make it lose viscosity and move against gravity, and what makes some substance capable of being superfluids while other incapable,I would be grateful to a detailed easy explanation for a high school student, thanks in advance.
1- it loses viscosity
2- flows upwards along the wall against gravity !
And there is a property I'm not sure about, that it can't be held in a container because it leaks out of it.
However what's the physical explanation for all of that what really happens to the fluid at zero kelvin at the atomic level to make it lose viscosity and move against gravity, and what makes some substance capable of being superfluids while other incapable,I would be grateful to a detailed easy explanation for a high school student, thanks in advance.