06-16-2015, 02:38 AM
(06-16-2015, 02:32 AM)Silverduke1 Wrote:Well yeah methane can be denser than water so that is true, but in it's liquid form it requires very low temperature, but the boiling point of any matter can be raised by high pressure which at the bottom of the seafloor has which that is why methane lakes on the seabed can also be possible.(06-16-2015, 02:26 AM)SCN-3_NULL Wrote: Well the liquid itself also cannot be soluable in water or else it'll be part of the water, mostly liquid/fluid underwater is mostly molten minerals, like sulphur lakes on the seabed.i did say similar to how a lavalamp works not the same. I was refering to the density thing. I'm heading to bed. For some reason i wanna say methane hydrathe or methane sulfate is denser. I think my father mentioned something involving a methane compound being denser then water forming lakes cause i asked about wether their could actually be lakes at the bottom of the ocean cause i had just watched spongebob. It was a long time ago so im probably wrong or misremembering. And my father wasn't the most trustworthy sometimes. Anyway nighty night see you guys tommarow
a lavalamp have two types of liquids that are not soluable to eachother commonly dyed water and wax, the wax just becomes less dense rather than change state to gas when heated up to float up and when it cools it becomes denser while still in molten form/liquid and sinks back down,
It's okay to get carried away. Good to have my system back high operation power though I hope that'll help in my engineering maths 3 test with laplace transform.
Anywy good night and sleep tight, I still have formulars to memorize.