If a light bulb gets wet, it can short circuit and potentially cause a fire or electrical shock. It is important to ensure that light bulbs are kept dry and not exposed to water to prevent any safety hazards.
The wet bulb temperature is always lower than the dry bulb temperature. The wet bulb temperature is the temperature taken by a thermometer covered in a wet cloth and exposed to moving air, and it reflects the evaporative cooling effect.
If paper gets wet, it can become soggy, wrinkled, and distorted. The ink or graphite on the paper may run or smudge, and the paper may tear more easily. It is important to let wet paper dry completely to prevent further damage.
When a wet object gets dry, the water molecules on the surface of the object evaporate into the air, reducing its moisture content. This process is driven by temperature, airflow, and humidity levels in the surrounding environment.
Nothing really happens. It gets wet at every practice or training session. The problem is that is you expose a Leo to direct sunlight or use iron you may kiss your leotard good buy. Lycra does not like it
The wet bulb thermometer is typically read lower than the dry bulb thermometer because the evaporation of water on the wet bulb cools the sensor by removing heat from it. This process is known as evaporative cooling and results in a lower temperature reading on the wet bulb thermometer compared to the dry bulb thermometer.
its all about the electricity inside it. when the water gets into the light bulbs electricity gets irritated, that makes it explode. well, its either that or the light bulb just gets really angry at water that it explodes.
It gets disappeared when if it gets wet.
Then the ear gets wet...
it gets wet
He gets wet
it disolves
it gets wet
It gets rusty and smells funny.
It changes color and
it gets wet.
It breaks
They shrink