Imagine being an explorer, cracking open a 10,000-year-old tomb, uncovering a priceless ancient artifact – and getting rickrolled. Our deep descendants might just get the pleasure, thanks to a Global Music Vault due to be built in Norway, featuring Microsoft’s Project Silica, a tough new data…
What is glass except just a bunch of really tiny Stones melted together?
Glass is actually more of a very slow moving liquid than a solid. You can see this on windows that are hundreds of years old, e.g. in churches. They will be thicker on the bottom because part of the glass flowed down.
No it isn’t. That’s an urban legend.
It’s a matter of debate, but it definitely isn’t a solid.
You are telling me that if we heat glass it would deform? Who would have thought about that right
Heat in this context means any temperature above -273.15°C. Steel doesn’t display liquid properties at “room temperature”, glass does.
Which liquid property? I don’t see any
Deforming on time scales longer than a human life, so that’s why you wouldn’t see it. It might indeed be an urban legend, I don’t know, but given the claims in the article I cited I wouldn’t entirely discount the possibility.
Alright, but the article is talking about long to infinite timescales. The discussion above was about church windows and that is not caused by glass flowing.