A dense concentration of very small particles will reflect more light
even if there is less total material, than a loose collection of big ones.
Ode
At 01:42 PM 2/1/2011 -0800, you wrote:
I just took some photos of the tyndall with a laser pen in the dark of
several liquids. One thing
I just took some photos of the tyndall with a laser pen in the dark of
several liquids. One thing I noticed that was the tyndall of tap water was
not actually that bright. It was pretty dim in fact. The tyndall of a
roughly 10ppm CS that went a little wrong was MUCH stronger. This CS was
still
Well filtered tap water should have no tyndall. Often tyndall in tap
water is from bubbles, which quickly rise to the surface.
Marshall
On 2/1/2011 4:42 PM, David AuBuchon wrote:
I just took some photos of the tyndall with a laser pen in the dark of
several liquids. One thing I noticed that
So tap water has lots of ions in it, that contribute to lots of
conductivity, but don't contribute to tyndall, and has very little
particles in it that create very little tyndall?
~David
On Tue, Feb 1, 2011 at 1:53 PM, Marshall mdud...@king-cart.com wrote:
Well filtered tap water should have no
4 matches
Mail list logo