Why Does a Hard Boiled Egg Spin and Raw Egg Won't?

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A hard-boiled egg spins smoothly on a flat surface because its solid interior allows torque to be transmitted effectively throughout the egg. In contrast, a raw egg contains liquid that does not immediately respond to the torque applied to the shell, causing it to spin slowly or not at all. This phenomenon can be illustrated by spinning a glass of water with tea leaves, where the leaves lag behind due to the liquid's inertia. If the raw egg is spun continuously, the yolk eventually gains speed and the egg begins to spin like a hard-boiled egg. A common test for determining if an egg is cooked involves spinning it and observing that a raw egg's yolk continues to move inside after the shell stops, indicating it is uncooked.
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why would a hard boiled egg spin and raw egg won't if made to spin on a flat surface?
 
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When you spin the shell of a raw egg, the torque is not transmitted to the liquid inside.
You can see this by rotating a glass of water with tea leaves. The leaves take a long time to spin if you spin the flass.
 
the torque is not transferred to the liquid..ok, then the reason it does not rotate is due to the imbalance of torque outside and inside?
 
For a raw egg the torque is transmitted slowly to the liquid inside. And since you usually spin an egg just once around, there is not much angular momentum that can be imparted to the egg so quickly. If you do keep on rotating it, after a few turns the yolk will pick up speed and the egg will go ahead and spin like a cooked egg.

Conversely, a standard method of determining whether an egg is cooked or not is to get it spinning and then suddenly bring it to a halt. Then release it. For an uncooked egg the yolk will not immediately stop, it will keep on going inside even after the shell is stopped. Then when you release the egg the spinning motion will resume.
 
thanks alot!
 
Thread 'Question about pressure of a liquid'
I am looking at pressure in liquids and I am testing my idea. The vertical tube is 100m, the contraption is filled with water. The vertical tube is very thin(maybe 1mm^2 cross section). The area of the base is ~100m^2. Will he top half be launched in the air if suddenly it cracked?- assuming its light enough. I want to test my idea that if I had a thin long ruber tube that I lifted up, then the pressure at "red lines" will be high and that the $force = pressure * area$ would be massive...
I feel it should be solvable we just need to find a perfect pattern, and there will be a general pattern since the forces acting are based on a single function, so..... you can't actually say it is unsolvable right? Cause imaging 3 bodies actually existed somwhere in this universe then nature isn't gonna wait till we predict it! And yea I have checked in many places that tiny changes cause large changes so it becomes chaos........ but still I just can't accept that it is impossible to solve...

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