Sir Isaac newton who originated the concept of viscosity and is often called Non- Newtonian fluid mechanics.
The viscosity is similar to the viscosity of water.
Viscosity is the resistance of a liquid to flow. It is a measure of the internal friction within a fluid as it moves. Liquids with high viscosity flow more slowly than those with low viscosity.
No, in terms of viscosity, 300 is thicker than 150. Viscosity is a measure of a fluid's resistance to flow, with higher numbers indicating higher viscosity and thicker fluids.
Single viscosity is high quality oil. Mulit-viscosity oil is used for in the winter.
To answer my own question :), if I interpret the differentials correctly, viscosity does have its maximum when there are no shearing forces, regardless of whether the fluid is newtonian or not. So, in short, yes.
Viscosity is resistance to flow of oil Viscosity Index is a scale to measure viscosity
The viscosity is similar to the viscosity of water.
honey has high viscosity lah, and water has low viscosity. anything that resists flow has high viscosity...lah. honey has high viscosity lah, and water has low viscosity. anything that resists flow has high viscosity...lah.
viscosity in Filipino: kalaputan
Viscosity doesn't happen. Viscosity is a measure of how easily a liquid flows.
viscosity
Viscosity is the resistance of a liquid to flow. When temperature decreases Viscosity generally increases. Viscosity generally decreases when the temperature increases.
Viscosity is a fluids resistance to flow. A high viscosity fluid would be thick, a low viscosity fluid would be thin.
For example the viscosity of water.
The liquids with high viscosity flow slowly and liquids with low viscosity flow quickly.
The liquids with high viscosity flow slowly and liquids with low viscosity flow quickly.
Viscosity index is a measure of how an oil's viscosity changes with temperature. Higher viscosity index oils are more resistant to changes in viscosity with temperature, making them perform more consistently across a range of temperatures.