So like really trying to force water around it the water would have no where to go what would happen?
I desperately want to know what you were thinking might happen when you asked this question.
A hovering blobb of liquid, equidistant from each wall, most likely.
That’s basically what you get, but the distance from each wall is about an atom thick.
Hey, that atom thick distance allows the water to not stick to the coating.
Not a blobb, an orb
Like magnets
Or maybe explosive splashing.
The long awaited invention of anti-gravity.
The bucket would be dry.
Basically, the water would be held inside the bucket in the shape of the bucket without getting the bucket wet, because the hydrophobic coating would prevent the water from touching the bucket, however the water would still touch the hydrophobic coating, it just will not stick to the hydrophobic coating.
Well the bucket would get very scared.
hydrophobia is no laughing matter. 😂
well then, why are you laughing?!
You ever use a paper cup? That’s basically what they are.
A black hole would open up, don’t do it
I thought that only happened if you put a hydrophobic bucket inside a hydrophobic portable hole.
Not until you know the Seventh Symbol
Eight chevron locked— we’re going to Pegasus!
“Alright everyone, remember where we parked!”
black hole… sun…?
A black hole having the mass of the sund would have a Schwarzschild radius of circa 3 kilometers.
Eh nothing interesting. The water would be in the bucket but pool and bead much quicker, instead of spreading and getting the bucket ‘wet’. Kind of like a hydrophobic windshield coating.
The coating just keeps water from ‘sticking’ to it or from soaking in to cloth etc. it doesn’t do anything special aside from that, you’d just have a normal bucket of water in this case
which would probably pour the water out better than normal bucket due to less droplets still sticking in it.
Probably yeah. I seem to remember some sort of YouTube science video doing something like this.
The water sits in it, but only where gravity holds it. There would be a very pronounced meniscus at the top. That is, if you looked closely the water would dip down really far at the edges before it meets the bucket.
It’s not that hydrophobic substances can’t touch water, it’s that the force of surface tension will oppose it. Unless you’re an ant, surface tension isn’t that impressive vs. most other forces.
Edit: If you have an ant-sized bucket, the water may sit on top of it as a droplet rather than going in.
Do… you think a coating repels water a foot away like some sort of anti-water magnet…?
How do you think Jesus walked on water?
The actual surface of the bucket won’t make contact with the water in it. There will be a thin film acting as a barrier between the water and the surface of the bucket.
Like, on the inside of the bucket? It’ll still hold water like normal.
However if you put it on the outside of the bucket nothing changes at all and this comment is a pointless thief of your time and attention. Sorry.
Don’t listen to the jeering goons, OP. Keep asking questions. 🤜🤛
Pretty sure you’d get one big bead of water. Something much more interesting are superfluids.
What would happen if you lather yourself in soap so you’re really slippery and then you sit in a bath?
Actually you’d probably hurt yourself getting into the bath so maybe don’t try this.
I think with a jump and just the right angle of entry you can probably slide down the sloping face …and probably end up with two broken legs and a tap half-way up your asshole.
Maybe I’ve been watching too much Looney tunes
I think some of us admit to doing this as kids.
You’d have a bucket of water I’m pretty sure