can you compress a liquid so much that the molecules can't move around
like it would be if they're absolute zero but there's still liquid temperature
or if you had two liquids they could never mix and they'd be like two liquid blocks
and you release pressure temperature ricochets back
and they turn into blocks of steam
then you have two blocks of steam but not compressed together
temperature rebounds back to normal and they fall into liquid again, as in normal liquid
>>8706766
look up zero point energy, tard.
>>8706779
/thread
sage
>>8706766
Well you can compress a liquid so much that the molecules move very little. We call this form of matter a solid.
/thread
>>8706766
Yeah I bet you could do it with little brass valves too.
>>8706766
>two liquid blocks
>absolute zero
>not understanding the ideal gas law
HAHAHAHAHA
>>8706766
>>8706766
In the centre of the flat Earth of the sphere, iron is both solid and liquid but mainly solid because iron it a metal.
>>8707824
i've seen some iron, there is no way that shit is liquid
that's as bad as saying glass is a liquid
iron is solid, go and find some, take a look for yourself
>>8708136
>i've seen some iron, there is no way that shit is liquid
Compress liquid? ...
>>8706766
>can you compress a liquid so much that the molecules can't move around
Yes OP, you can. I have such a device that allows you to do that right here. It allows for the storage of a liquid in a certain shape to allow for compression, you only need to put it inside of a sub-freezing point container.
>>8706766
Yes. When you compress something, it's freezing point goes up; eventually, you compress it so hard that it can't stay liquid anymore. You can freeze water into ice both by lowering the temperature, or increasing the pressure.
>>8708144
did you take that picture? no. it's just something you found on the internet
>>8706766
> can you compress a liquid so much that the molecules can't move around
No
That would take all the energy in the universe
The long story shot is because it would break thermodynamics otherwise
>>8708243
At high enough pressures water is compressible.