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(, Sun 1 Apr 2001, 1:00)
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What about if you make it bubbly water? Is it lighter if there are bubbles, because there is more air and less water then?

(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 11:59, 2 replies, latest was 15 years ago)
Also, buildings need counter-balances on top of them to adjust when the wind comes, so it could help with that.

(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:00, Reply)
Could make them mezamean floors.

(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:00, Reply)
And they'll bread lobsters in them, and you can pick them, and you can eat lobsters like most people eat normal tiny shrimps.

(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:01, Reply)
God, I love lobster.

(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:01, Reply)
wouldn't make a lot of difference
an office building will be designed for a live load of 5kN/m^2, and assuming 2.5m ceiling heights and the water not moving at all your aquarium would be about 25kN/m^2
(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:02, Reply)
That'd just mean that the internal floor structure would collapse, though
rather than the entire building, shirley?
(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:03, Reply)
Although I guess once it gets to ground level, it's going to want to push outwards
with a considerable amount of force.
(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:04, Reply)
WATERPROOF TROUSERS.

(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:11, Reply)
Yeah', I guess a bit of tarpooling would fix the job.

(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:11, Reply)
you know columns right?
they go all the way down to the bottom. Yeah, you'd most likely get the beams and floors shearing away from the columns, but all of that shit falling multiple stories is going to fuck shit up.
(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:13, Reply)
Out of curiousity, can you calculate how much force
5m by, say, 60m2 of water will place on the walls of a tower block once it hits ground level and compresses?
(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:15, Reply)
hitting the ground and going outwards?
not all that easily.

water is treated as incompressible as well
(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:17, Reply)
Really? Why's that?
Because if it didn't compress when it hit the ground, it wouldn't place pressure on the walls.
(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:29, Reply)
because
it is basically incompressible. Compression isn't what would make it put pressure on the walls.
(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:44, Reply)
So what does?
I'm genuinely interested, albeit shamefully ignorant.
(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:48, Reply)
magic

(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:50, Reply)
conservation of energy and momentum

(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 13:25, Reply)
So what you're saying is, in a world where we can build skyscrapers to be 100s of storys tall.... in a world where we can fly from london to new york inside a few hours....
...in a world where engering is advance that we have all of humanty's collective knowledge accessable to anyone in the world.... in a world where we can put man on the moon.... that we can't build an equarium in the sky if we really really put all our efforts into it?
(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:07, Reply)
you could
but you'd have to build it like that from the start
(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:11, Reply)
OK, we'll do that then.
Maybe build it in the middle of hyde park.
(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:12, Reply)
Also
we can't fly across the Atlantic in a few hours anymore. Or put a man on the moon either, for that matter.

Scientific progress is in reverse gear.
(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:38, Reply)
What, like 'Kriss Kross'?

(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:42, Reply)
Uhuh uhuh

(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:43, Reply)
The Daddy Mac'll make you jump jump

(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:47, Reply)
We, as humans, can still travel from london to new york inside hours.
OK, fair comment about the moon thing though, although I suspect that if we as a planet wanted too, really really wanted too, and it was important, we would do it.
(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:47, Reply)
I think it's more impressive that we, as humans,
can make our own pasta.

That's some kind of skill, right there.
(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:48, Reply)
London to Halifax, Nova Scotia
takes 5 hours.

FACTBOMB
(, Tue 2 Aug 2011, 12:49, Reply)

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