surface tension.
use a blow dyryer and a wet cloth
A balloon can stick to a wall due to static electricity. When you rub the balloon against your hair or a wool cloth, it gains a negative charge. The negatively charged balloon is attracted to the neutral or positively charged wall, causing it to stick temporarily.
A wet cloth will temporarily stifle the smoke that is emanating from the hole in the wall.
No, wet cloth is not stronger than dry cloth. When cloth gets wet, it may become more pliable but it also loses some of its structural integrity, making it weaker overall.
When you rub a balloon against a wool cloth, the balloon becomes negatively charged due to the transfer of electrons. When placed against a wall, the negatively charged balloon is attracted to the positively charged wall, causing it to stick temporarily due to electrostatic forces.
Wet tee-shirt contest
When a wet cloth it jerked the water on it is given kinetic energy. When you stop the movement of the wet cloth by not letting go of it some of the water keeps propelling forward with the energy it was given and does thus not stay on the cloth.
When a wet piece of cloth is shaken, the water molecules clinging to the cloth are disrupted, causing them to be released into the air as tiny droplets. This process is called atomization and is why you may feel water droplets on your skin or in the air when shaking a wet cloth.
Yes, rubbing a balloon with a flannel cloth can create static electricity on the surface of the balloon, causing it to stick to the cloth due to electrostatic attraction.
The equal and opposite reaction is the wall pushing back against you. When you hit the wall with a stick, the force you exert on the wall is transferred to you through the stick, causing the wall to push back with an equal force. The stick simply transmits this force between you and the wall.
Water can be evaporated from a wet cloth by heat so that the water rises into the air and the cloth stays without liquid (solvent) inside it.
a wet cloth