Dumdum here, why doesn't the water fill up above the top of the pipe in the second section?
It does.
It does if it's an Einstein-Bose condensate.
It does even if its water. You have been trolled
>/sci/ answered an obvious troll
>>8676615
>/sci/ stoopid
>>8676590
No it doesn't.
>>8676639
now it doesn't
>>8676587
ask yourself this: as the water level rises in the left tank, what forces are at play to make the water level rise in the right?
none, which is why it doesnt continue to rise.
if there was another joint a little higher up, the water would begin falling through it and stacking on the right tank. Then the water would continue to rise in that tank until it levels off with the joint.
but in your scenario, its already level with the only joint. All water added just stacks on top of the left tanj, there is no reason for the right tank to rise with it
>>8676800
>what forces are at play to make the water level rise in the right?
what is pressure
>>8676711
it will still rise a little bit until the pressure equalizes. the air in the cavity will be compressed.
>>8676800
nice bait
>>8676587
>what is equilibrium
it gets stuck on the ceiling
>>8676711
Now it does
http://physics.kenyon.edu/EarlyApparatus/Fluids/Hydrostatic_Paradox/Hydrostatic_Paradox.html