It is evaporating immediately (not sublimation). The pressure / humidity / temperature must be right enough to cause this. You can see the water glistening on the snow, but doesn't have time to drip before evaporating.
E: Oh fuck, I'm yellow now. Not wonder all the options look fucking different. I thought it was this subverse or whatever. Whelp, about time for a new account.
I'm yellow now
Is there an explanation to all the colors somewhere? I missed orientation.
The . It's like leveling up in a cheesy online game, haha.
"Sublimation is the transition of a substance directly from the solid to the gas state, without passing through the liquid state."
Water can do this but not in standard atmospheric pressure (14.7 psi)
611.66 pascals = 0.08 psi
That ice/snow ball would have to be in a vacuum to evaporate like the video. The real question is can you see water dripping from the ball? Maybe it's wicking off into his hand, I don't know.
What the Triple Point of Water has to do with anything here, I have no idea. Heat is being added to the ice. The ice melts. We can see the water in the liquid state in the video. It evaporates before dripping to the ground (nothing to do with the Triple State) due to various factors. Either that, or there is video trickery, which I highly doubt.
I give up with explaining anything to tards like you.
(post is archived)