Water Suddenly Becomes Mysterious 76
An anonymous reader writes "Logical to assume that scientists know the structure of water. But wrong. A study in April by Anders Nilsson from the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center concluded the molecular bonds are looser than thought. Now a new study by Richard Saykally's group at UC Berkeley appears to debunk the April results. So a new debate is born. Both scientists agree on one thing: They don't fully understand how water molecules interact."
come now (Score:1)
Re:come now (Score:1)
Hmm... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Hmm... (Score:3, Informative)
Spectroscopists use ultrafast experiments for the same reason photographers use fast flashlamps: to capture the action, unblurred. But the motion of water, one of the most labile molecules around, is too fast, and there is argument (at least there was in the mid-90s, when I was going to seminars) about how meaningful the ball-and-stick models of water clusters were. Was it a real geometry, or an average over the time of the laser pulse? Apparently, arguments continue ove
Re:Hmm... (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, I did my Ph.D. on ultrafast infrared spectroscopy of water between 1997 and 2001 and things have changed since the mid-90s. The dynamics of the hydrogen-bond network in liquid water happens mainly on a timescale of a few picoseconds, which is actually in agreement wit
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Why so mysterious? Drink it, take a shower, ... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Why so mysterious? Drink it, take a shower, ... (Score:1)
Vodka (Score:2, Funny)
"NIPPLES!! I HAVE NO NIPPLES!!!" -Happy Noodle Boy
Re:Vodka (Score:1)
The correct phrase would be "must have".
Perfect Tenses:The perfect tenses show completed state or action.
The present perfect is formed with has or have and a past participle. (i.e., "Somebody has swapped the 'control' test with vodka.")
The past perfect, also called the pluperfect, requires had and a past participle. (i.e., "Somebody had swapped the 'control' test with vodka.")
The future p
Re:Vodka (Score:1)
In related news... (Score:1)
water is weird (Score:5, Interesting)
-the solid is less dense than the liquid (ice floats). This is key for life, as otherwise lakes would freeze from the bottom up and freeze solid. The ice that forms on top now acts as an insulator.
-there are 12 known varieties of ice, depending on pressure and temperature conditiions. Not all of them have a hexagonal crystal strucuture.
-for it's size, water boils at a very high temperature. This is due to the organization of the liquid into hexagonal rings of 6 molecules, preventing any from evaporating.
-it's one of the few common substances that we see in all 3 phases. (i.e. you don't see solid vodka around, nor gaseous iron, etc)
-it's the best known solvent in existance (i.e. it dissolves the most stuff).
The list goes on and on. Water is actually fairly miraculous.
Re:water is weird (Score:2)
Cheers,
Roger
Re:water is weird (Score:1, Interesting)
Ahh, but we know life is possible based on water (and a few other things). Non-water based life is just a theory; probable, but just a theory nevertheless.
Re:water is weird (Score:2)
bacteria survive far harsher environments. Thrive even.
Re:water is weird (Score:2, Funny)
It wouldn't.
But that's because God pointed a finger and said "Let there be Life!"
Re:water is weird (Score:1)
Re:water is weird (Score:1)
Re:water is weird (Score:2)
Re:water is weird (Score:2, Funny)
I didn't know vodka was an element now.
Re:water is weird (Score:2, Funny)
Re:water is weird (Score:2, Funny)
Re:water is weird (Score:2, Funny)
Wine is, why not vodka? (Score:2)
Re:water is weird (Score:1)
It is not. Neither is water.
Re:water is weird (Score:1)
Re:water is weird (Score:2)
Re:water is weird (Score:1, Funny)
1. selective parting to separate mutually-hostile people groups
2. use in cure for leprosy, and other things
3. instant conversion to grape juice product
4. unusual pedestrian support
And it does more than dissolve... (Score:2)
This reminds me that it is used in homeopathy. The problem is that it seems the active substance is diluted so much that there is probably not a single molecule of it left in the water. Yet, it works. As far as I know, scientists don't have a clue about how it can work, and many tend to doubt it does. Competent homeopats may have theories about how it works, but these theories never seemed to make much sense to me (they actually
Re:And it does more than dissolve... (Score:1)
Re:And it does more than dissolve... (Score:1)
Re:And it does more than dissolve... (Score:1)
To my knowledge no one has demostrated the effectiveness of extremely diluted homeopathic solutions. (Some homeopathic solutions do contain significant quantities of active principles.)
There's actually some sense to the basic premise of homopathy, that substances should be administered that enhance rather than mute the patient's symptoms. If someone is experiencing diarrhea, for example, it can be the body's attempt to expel a pathogen or poison, and perhaps should be assisted with a pur
Check Benveniste's work (Score:2)
I don't know if there's anything to it or not. He may be a quack but then again maybe not. I read somewhere that Nature was about to publish or perhaps did publish his work on water memory and some scientists got all riled up. Allegedly they sent the editor of Nature and James Randi to debunk him.
Re:Check Benveniste's work (Score:2)
On Sunday, October 3, 2004 [benveniste.org] ?
Shit!...
Seriously, interesting link.
I found the article (Score:2)
Re:water is weird (Score:2)
"Is not necessaraily true, comrade," said the drunk Siberian, licking his vodka popsicle and squinting at the sun.
Re:water is weird (Score:2)
However, it's only the ninth one that's real trouble. Well, unless you believe all the propaganda about DHMO.
I'm skeptic (Score:5, Informative)
From my background, I can mention that the infrared absorptions of the two OH bonds are at a wavenumber of 3650 and 3750 cm-1 (around 2.7 micrometers wavelength). In liquid water, these absorptions shift to a band around 3400 cm-1 (2.95 micron). It is a widely accepted fact that this shift of the OH vibration frequency occurs as a result of the hydrogen bond forming between the H of the OH and the O of the next water molecule:
There is hardly any absorption in liquid water at 3650 and 3750 cm-1, which would strongly suggest that nearly all water molecules have both of their hydrogen atoms bonded to other water molecules (that means four H-bonds per molecule). If the claim in the article were true, half of the OH groups would be free and absorb at a higher wavenumber.The idea that the OH absorption wavelength depends on whether it has a hydrogen bond is in agreement with a large number of studies in which for example clusters of two, three, four water molecules embedded in another material or in vacuum have different infrared absorptions. They are also in agreement with calculations on what happens with an OH bond when you let it form a hydrogen bond, and with fully quantum-mechanical so-called ab initio calculations of how water molecules should behave, although with the latter, one might object that computers still are not powerful enough to do these calculations with more than a couple of ten molecules at a time.
Solid evidence? (Score:2)
I'm skeptic (Score:2)
Huh? (Score:2)
I've previously noted the phenomenon of comments with similar subjects appearing together chronologically.
Now we have two comments, both entitled "I'm skeptic", written by different people.
I'm beginning to think that Slashdot is a huge AI system and I'm the only real person here. I'm also of the opinion that the "A" is far more significant than the "I", especially if the AI code is anything like the "HTML" that Slashcode produces...
Re:Water Patterns (Score:1)
Does it? Because thats news to me. I would take his name to mean that his water is somewhat louder than the usual.
Well, 'clear' makes a lot of sense too 'Lauterbach' is also a well known german surname.
bit of perspective (Score:5, Interesting)
None of the (molecular dynamics, "MD") computer models of water are currently sufficient to reproduce all of the experimentally observered properties of water. This is a relatively big point of contention when simulating proteins as water needs to be accounted for. There are experimentalists that chide the theorists, even saying that they won't fully believe MD results until a decent model of water has been built.
We also don't quite know what the first hydration shell around a protein looks like. Imagine this is being the closest "coat" of water around a protein. This ordering of water could be a key component to understanding the properties/behavior of protein surfaces in binding to other molecules.
In addition, water mediated interactions between proteins is almost a completely open question. As far as I know, we don't really know how to approach the problem in an elegant manner and there have been no studies that reasonably address this at a detailed molecular level (partially due to the above two issues) even in a heuristic sense.
There is a huge literature on water. A good deal of work has been done on the above three issues and other big open issues with water that I won't go into depth on. Needless to say water has been and will continue to be a mystery for quite a while.
MOD Parent Up (Score:4, Interesting)
Sig (Score:2)
"we didn't have a good grasp of water" (Score:1)
"we didn't have a good grasp of water" you said.
Ever tried nailing water to a tree?
Your arguments don't hold water. And I'm not getting myself wet by making another counterargument easily liquidated. It's not like drowning in non-solid arguments is going to flow anywhere.
By the way. Shouldn't the huge litterature "on water" be "underwater"? Some books don't float you know.
MOD me desinformative. (-;
Masaru Emoto (Score:3, Interesting)
.
-shpoffo
Re:Masaru Emoto (Score:1)
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-shpoffo
The Zen Grammar Nazi asks, "How loose is thought?" (Score:2)
Try "previously thought," for example.
Christ, why do we contine to pay these so-called editors?
Oh, wait...