Yes, glass moves but very, very slowly! It is a liquid.
no it does not move unless you force it.
When you blow the top of the glass tube, the gas pressure which act on the ink will reduced and causes the ink to move up.
Yes, rubbing a silk cloth on glass cause electrons to move to the cloth. As a result, glass rod acquires positive charge and silk acquires negative charge.
It can't move anything that is not metal such as plastic,paper,glass,cloth etc..........
The glass surface will began to heat up and the particles will expand and move apart. This will make it hot and your mass inside you will heat
it's all down to fricton, the rougher the surface the harder it is to pull.
no
No! there's no magnet attraction between glass and metal, I don't think the glass wont do anything.
No the electrons are not free to move. This means that the electrical conductivity will be relatively low. -jk
When you blow the top of the glass tube, the gas pressure which act on the ink will reduced and causes the ink to move up.
Yes, rubbing a silk cloth on glass cause electrons to move to the cloth. As a result, glass rod acquires positive charge and silk acquires negative charge.
There may be a small possibility that the glass was moved by poltergeist activity. When the glass was moved, the move put the glass in an unstable position, causing it to fall and break.
Only a small layer of the molecules at the glass-water interface move with the glass. Otherwise no force is being applied to the other water molecules and objects at rest remain at rest unless acted upon by an outside force. This is often referred to as the "No slip condition".
Because glass is a smooth surface. Worms move by using microscopic hairs on their bodies to provide traction so they can pull themselves forward.
A flat surface of wet glass.
Pick up 2nd glass, pour its contents into 5th glass, return 2nd glass to its place.
Yes. Neither the glass nor the water shields the paperclipfrom the field of the magnet.
The glass fractures outward from the point of impact. The particles that make up the glass break apart and move upward.