posted ago by JaoBiZen ago by JaoBiZen +4 / -1

If you lower the temperature of water to a cold temperature, moisture builds up on the outside. Now if we have a bottle, and another bottle with a gap in between the two, the water transfers, I believe there would be no sort of virus since it is slowed and they can’t move through a solid. We should still heat it up, then cool it for great water. That’s one way to transfer water because I saw it happen yesterday to me. Also, make sure the gap is closed on the outside, obviously

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E-dantes 1 point ago +1 / -0

It doesn't transfer through. It gravitates the interior gaseous humidity toward the interior surface. Like a survival cup in a whole with a plastic tarp over the cup with a rock in the center. The heat created by the sun in the plastic pulls moisture from the ground, which then gathers on the underside of the plastic, then when drops of water are heavy enough to overcome the friction forces on the plastic, they roll down to where the rock is placed and drip into the cup. There is no transfer through a surface.

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JaoBiZen [S] 1 point ago +1 / -0

It happened to me, though.. it was a plastic cup with two layers, one at the top and one at the bottom. I cooled the water for a while, then poured it. Minutes later the moisture built up, and it moved to the bottom. It was weird because I had two sets of water

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E-dantes 1 point ago +1 / -0

I would suggest reading more on the topic of humidity and, I think it's osmosis you are describing. You're may be conflating the two.

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JaoBiZen [S] 1 point ago +1 / -0

I will send you a picture at some point with what I am talking about

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E-dantes 1 point ago +1 / -0

A time lapse video would be better. Or a series of shots. But a single pic would work for starters.