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If you dip a paper towel into water, the water absorbs up the paper towel. These molecules are gaining height, and hence mgh is increasing. Where does the energy come from to lift the water molecules?
The discussion centers on the source of energy involved in capillary action, particularly in the context of water being absorbed by a paper towel. Participants explore the relationship between intermolecular forces, gravitational potential energy, and the energy required for the process, including hypothetical scenarios such as the absence of gravity.
Participants express differing views on the source of energy in capillary action, with no consensus reached on whether intermolecular forces are consumed or merely transformed into potential energy.
Some assumptions regarding the definitions of energy and forces in this context remain unaddressed, and the implications of removing gravity introduce additional complexity that is not fully explored.
bp_psy said:
Pyro Ninja said:So, if the energy required to lift the water through capillary action, is coming from the
inter-molecular forces, then why aren't these forces being 'used up' very slightly as they convert their energy into the gaining of height by the water molecules?