"Water began flowing from one beaker to the other" https://youtu.be/U7PeezOzprE?t=192
The flow can obviously do mechanical work, e.g. by rotating a waterwheel. At the expense of what energy?
At the expense of ambient heat (no other source of usable energy), in violation of the second law of thermodynamics.
https://www.ecourses.ou.edu/ebook/thermodynamics/ch05/sec052/media/th050206p.gif
Pentcho Valev https://twitter.com/pentcho_valev
In electrospray
https://youtube.com/watch?v=aoZnzIO9ZJ0
the liquid jet can obviously do mechanical work, e.g. by rotating a waterwheel. The work will be done at the expense of ambient heat - there is no other usable source of energy, as can be seen from this picture:
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRhfCwkzGWsBSGpqOVVaNEaPdRbdQPZxfghmA&usqp=CAU
Pentcho Valev https://twitter.com/pentcho_valev
Try Bhaskaracharya's wheel, and the Perendev construction, for perpetual motion.
Look at every atom and the planets.
On 5/3/2023 9:03 PM, Arindam Banerjee wrote:Wrong.
Try Bhaskaracharya's wheel, and the Perendev construction, for perpetual motion.Both discredited, of course.
Look at every atom and the planets.
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