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Re: mr_sano post# 47102

Thursday, 05/09/2019 12:53:07 PM

Thursday, May 09, 2019 12:53:07 PM

Post# of 57740
It is easy to find dozens of of articles that plainly state there is no causal relationship between viscosity and density. Just because most compounds that are more dense tend to be more viscous doesn't mean that density causes viscosity. Mercury is the perfect example of something that is very dense but is not very viscous. I know that is hard for you to follow.
Here is an article that explains the difference between the two.

What is the difference between Viscosity and Density?

While most of the people think that viscosity and density are both the same thing expressed in different forms, they are two truly different concepts. Density is a measurement of the molecular weight of the composition. In simpler words, density = number of molecules x molecular weight/volume occupied, while the viscosity is a measurement of the inter-molecular forces and molecule shapes. Viscosity tells you the “friction” between two layers of the given fluid.....

Viscosity and density are two different physical phenomena depending on totally different aspects. The common misconception of “heavier fluids are more viscous” is to be omitted.



Just face the facts. It is a losing argument to continue to insist that there is some law of nature that states viscosity can't be reduced without reducing density too.

To continue to argue that the AOT cannot possibly work because of some reason that you and only you have dreamed up is a farce that has been EXPOSED.