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The scientific reason is that broken glass costs money.
Insulator- Material that does not let heat pass through it easilyPlastic, WoodConductor- Material that lets heat pass through it easilyMetal, Glass
It is the force exerted within the glass when it hits the floor that breaks it. If the glass falls on a hard floor like concrete then the force is very big because the floor has no "give." Effectively the bit of the glass that hits the floor stops instantly but the rest of the glass following behind is still moving. The force within the glass is bigger than the tensile strength of the material and so it fails. If the glass falls on a carpet then the carpet has some "give." The glass slows down over a few millimeters by squashing the carpet. This massively reduces the forces within the glass and gives it a fighting chance of staying in one piece.
hey you can't really make a fish tank if your not an expert at sculpting glass you will have to make it with another material I could give you an example like a vase or something.
Bullet resistant glass will. Regular window glass- no.
cobalt glass is glass containing cobalt oxide or cobaltous oxide as a colouring agent. These oxides give the glass a blue colouring.
Use clear silicon--it has "give" and is not rigid.
Material: Flesh and Animals Non Material: Ideas and Thoughts
No, you have to deposit money in the account first, after that they give you a credit based on the amount you deposited. But the deposited amount stays in there until they change it to an unsecured card.
Glass is made out of sand which contains Silica. Often other elements are added to give the glass specific properties such as hardness.
The blue glass gets hot, and may even melt.
Yes. All solid structures have mechanical properties, and with those mechanical properties comes susceptibility to mechanical resonance. The material can vibrate. This material willvibrate if given energy to do so, and the nature of the energy and the nature of the material, i.e., its mechanical properties, will determine the harmonic motion (vibration) that may be set up within the material. Take the example of a crystal wine glass. It will "sing" if we rub a damp finger around the rim in the right way. We give the glass mechanical energy. The mechanical structure of the glass responds. The glass has a resonant frequency that we've found by dragging a finger about its opening. The mechanical energy we give to the glass is distributed throughout its structure, and the glass vibrates according to its intrinsic mechanical nature. All solids will conduct mechanical energy by vibrating. Certainly something like foam rubber won't vibrate very much at all if we smack it with a hammer, but a bell will. All solids will vibrate to some degree when mechanically stimulated.