Posted on 07/22/2013 7:01:13 AM PDT by Red Badger
The Pitch Drop experiment set up in 1944 at Trinity College Dublin's School of Physics is one of the world's oldest continuously running experiments.
The experiment was established to demonstrate that pitch is a material that flows, albeit with an incredibly high viscosity hence extremely slowly. Also known as asphalt or bitumen, pitch appears to be solid at room temperature.
Whilst pitch has been dropping from the funnel in Trinity since 1944, nobody had ever witnessed a drop fall. It happens roughly only once in a decade.
In May of this year, with the latest drop about to fall, Professor Shane Bergin broadcast the experiment via the web. On July 11th, the drop dripped. You can see a time lapse video of this here.
Tracking the evolution of the drop, Professor Denis Weaire and Professor Stefan Hutzler, and David Whyte calculated the viscosity of the pitch to be 2x107 Pa s, approximately 2 million times the viscosity of honey.
Commenting on the significance of the demonstration, Professor Shane Bergin stated: "People love this experiment because it gets to the heart of what good science is all about curiosity. Over these past few months, there has been constant chat about when the drip would drop. I watched the time lapse video of the pitch drop falling over and over again. I was amazed. This was the first time this phenomenon was ever witnessed!"
The School of Physics at Trinity College Dublin has many old demonstrations and ancient experimental kit. The Pitch Drop experiment was begun when Nobel Prize winner Earnest Walton was head of the department.
The University of Queensland have a similar experiment that was begun in 1927. The Guinness Book of World Records ranks this as the world's longest running experiment. Whilst 8 drops have fallen in this experiment, nobody has ever witnessed one fall.
Whilst it will be roughly another 10 years before the next drop falls, you can look at the live experiment here.
So. Pitch drops.
Who knew?!
Who cares?!
;-)
I want to get a grant to measure the daily growth of Stalactites.
2x107 Pa s
Any reason it’s not expressed as 214 Pa s?
I’ve heard that glass flows extremely slowly as well.
Thats about the speed they put asphalt down on the roads around here.
Varlets are not supposed to understand.
Indeed it does.
Watching pitch drop over a decade may seem boring to some but it’s still better television than the coverage of the royal baby.
It has some value in ascertaining hydrocarbon reservoir dynamics. But the pressures and temperatures therein are going to much higher.
> 2x107 Pa s
>
> Any reason its not expressed as 214 Pa s?
Probably a formatting error and it’s supposed to be 2x10^7.
A prime opportunity for a government grant for science research. Decades between anything happening = job security.
Kidding of course.
I call stalagmites.
This is the slowest experiment in history. Sorta like watching our economy grow.
How much was the Government Grant for that Experiment?
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