QUESTION IMAGE
Question
can you explain it?
what causes the water droplets to change direction and spiral toward the charged needle?
on the international space station (iss), water droplets spiral around this charged knitting needle. water droplets, like any object, do not change motion unless something pushes or pulls on them.
- why might these water droplets move around the charged knitting needle and change direction?
Water is a polar molecule, meaning it has a slight positive charge on one end and slight negative charge on the other. A charged knitting needle creates an electric field. The polar water droplets are attracted to the oppositely charged region of the needle, and in the microgravity of the ISS, the combination of this electrostatic attraction and the lack of dominant gravity causes the droplets to spiral around the charged needle as the electric field acts on their polar structure, pulling them toward the needle while allowing them to move along the field lines.
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The water droplets move around and change direction near the charged knitting needle because water is a polar molecule (has uneven charge distribution). The charged needle creates an electric field, which exerts an electrostatic force on the polar water droplets. In the microgravity environment of the ISS, this electrostatic force (no strong gravitational force to interfere) pulls the droplets along the electric field lines, causing them to spiral toward the charged needle.