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What's the softest material on Earth?


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#1

pIsTruI
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Posted 12 November 2012 - 03:53 PM

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Materials Varying In Hardness Wayne Scherr/Getty Images
Everyone knows the hardest material on Earth is diamond, says George Pharr, director of the Joint Institute for Advanced Materials at the University of Tennessee. But when it comes to the softest stuff on the planet, “there’s no one definition,” he says.
Metallurgists and mineralogists might interpret “softness” to mean a material’s tendency to deform under pressure and to stay in that deformed state. But that reading might come off a little wonky when you start looking at elastic materials, like rubber, which can deform and then regain their form.
As a result of this ambiguity, researchers employ an array of hardness (or softness) tests, depending on what sort of material they’re looking at. For minerals, they might use the classic (and exceedingly simple) Mohs assay, which involves rubbing one material against another to see which one gets scratched. According to the Mohs scale, talc, also known as soapstone, is the softest mineral; it is composed of a stack of weakly connected sheets that tend to slip apart under pressure.
When it comes to metals, scientists try to measure hardness in absolute terms. They press a ball- or pyramid-shaped bit into the material in question at a predetermined pressure and over a set period of time. Researchers then measure the dent left behind. The hardness of a metal, Pharr says, depends on the fraction of its bonds that happen to be covalent; these are strong, stable arrangements in which atoms share a pair of electrons.
Pliable metals like gold have fewer of these bonds than tougher materials like molybdenum and tungsten. Highly reactive metals with low melting points, such as cesium and rubidium, end up at the very softest end of the spectrum. Pharr warns that any attempt to pick out the absolute softest material, however, “would be subject to debate.”

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#2

CentrallyProcessed
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Posted 12 November 2012 - 05:13 PM

Rather than copying random articles, it would be more helpful if you found an interesting news piece, provided a brief quotation (or wrote your own summation), and then a link to the article.
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#3

SuperZac
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Posted 12 November 2012 - 08:25 PM

I thought you were going to embed a Vsauce video :P
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#4

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Posted 13 November 2012 - 12:14 AM

Packing peanuts?
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#5

fm87
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Posted 13 November 2012 - 01:09 AM

The softest material on earth would probably be Oxygen or Carbon Dioxide.

Clarification, por favor.

#6

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Posted 13 November 2012 - 01:41 AM

View Postfm87, on 13 November 2012 - 01:09 AM, said:

The softest material on earth would probably be Oxygen or Carbon Dioxide.

Clarification, por favor.

Wouldn't any gas be softest?

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#7

CentrallyProcessed
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Posted 13 November 2012 - 04:06 PM

View Postlolpierandom, on 13 November 2012 - 01:41 AM, said:

Wouldn't any gas be softest?
Oxygen and Carbon Dioxide don't need to be gases. Sure, we usually think of them as gases, but cool them enough and they'll become solids. If I was to be specific, if you cool Oxygen to something like -220c or below, it will become a solid. Carbon dioxide would need to be cooled to around -60c to become a solid.

Those figures are from memory, so correct me if I'm incorrect.
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#8

lolpierandom
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Posted 13 November 2012 - 04:34 PM

View PostCentrallyProcessed, on 13 November 2012 - 04:06 PM, said:

Oxygen and Carbon Dioxide don't need to be gases. Sure, we usually think of them as gases, but cool them enough and they'll become solids. If I was to be specific, if you cool Oxygen to something like -220c or below, it will become a solid. Carbon dioxide would need to be cooled to around -60c to become a solid.

Those figures are from memory, so correct me I'm incorrect.
I know this.

And what's with the -220c? Why not just do Kelvin?

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Democracy is indispensable to socialism.
Comic Sans is the official sarcasm font!

#9

SteevyT
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Posted 13 November 2012 - 05:17 PM

View Postlolpierandom, on 13 November 2012 - 04:34 PM, said:

I know this.

And what's with the -220c? Why not just do Kelvin?

Here you go, I converted it to an absolute scale for you.   95.67Rankine

:P
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#10

pIsTruI
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Posted 13 November 2012 - 06:32 PM

View PostCentrallyProcessed, on 12 November 2012 - 05:13 PM, said:

Rather than copying random articles, it would be more helpful if you found an interesting news piece, provided a brief quotation (or wrote your own summation), and then a link to the article.
This might be a copy+paste but look at the posts above Posted Image.
People are talking about it and debating this thread.
I copy pasted what i've seen on the internet and made my research:]


-sorry for my bad grammar.