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The molecules in the water get attracted to the molecules of the narrow tube.
It is called capillary action
Yes
It travesl by motion
the light goes through it and travels with each other.
The molecules in the water get attracted to the molecules of the narrow tube.
This is called Capillary action.
It is called capillary action
A combination of adhesive and cohesive forces accounts for capillary action, which is the tendency of water to move through narrow tube's, and even against gravity.
A short narrow pool set up in such a way that you can swim against a current without actually moving forward. the liquid version of a treadmill.
If your referring to liquids going up the narrow tubes, than it can be called "Capillary action" or "capillarity". It occurs when the adhesive intermolecular forces between the liquid and a solid are stronger than the cohesive intermolecular forces withing the liquid. Otherwise, it would be "lift" and that just takes us to physics...
Cats use their whiskers to manuver. While going through narrow spaces, their wiskers brush up against them. They use that to gauge wether or not they can fit through.
Lakes and rivers
it would flow more easily through a narrow pipe
Streets of most Harappan cities were made narrow to protect against the wind.
runoff
The arrow shot through the narrow slit, hit.