Quote:Hehehe! Nice shot!
I believe pure H2O (no ions no minerals no nothing except H2O at perfect equilibrium) can't be electrolyzed.
Besides, you can't elecrolyze it without electrodes, right?
Which means sticking something into the water (ehm... yes, water... whatever).
Yes, but he never said anything about not sticking anything in the water, but he did state that it was H
2O (and you're correct, pure H
2O will not electrolyze). Now I get to mess with wordings:
Quote: (a) How could you make the H2O level fall without heating, moving the bottle or changing the amount of water inside?
Quote: Answer:
(a) Add salt - this causes the water molecules to pack together more tightly and the water level will fall very slightly
Chemically speaking, this answer is also wrong. When pure table salt, NaCl, is added to water, it breaks down into Cl
- and Na
+ ions, which then react with the water to form HCl, O
2, and Na
+ ions, which
are not natuarally found in water, so therefore you have changed the amount of water inside
Still, this is a much better answer than dropping the bottle
Quote: (b) How could you make the H2O level rise under the same conditions and without putting anything else inside?
Quote:(b) Freeze it - e.g. by packing dry ice around the bottle, since ice expands.
Batracio's answer was basically the same thing, except he was under the assumption that by changing the amount of "water" inside, you also meant not changing it into the ice form. So, this answer would also not work, since "under the same conditions", "changing the amount of water inside" is not allowed, and ice is not water, water is the liquid form.
Words are such fun to play around with
EDIT:
Quote:This was the answer and the
ONLY answer I was looking for! Please do not try to correct me, as this is the correct answer. I will ignore any claims trying to correct me on this.
lol, the truth is so often ignored