1 00:00:01,920 --> 00:00:07,160 Speaker 1: Welcome to brain Stuff production of iHeart Radio. Hey brain Stuff. 2 00:00:07,200 --> 00:00:10,920 Speaker 1: Lauren vogel Bomb here with today's question. Is glass a 3 00:00:10,960 --> 00:00:15,560 Speaker 1: liquid or a solid? If you've ever looked the window 4 00:00:15,600 --> 00:00:18,200 Speaker 1: panes in an old building, you may have noticed that 5 00:00:18,239 --> 00:00:21,000 Speaker 1: the glass was rippley and thicker towards the bottom of 6 00:00:21,000 --> 00:00:24,200 Speaker 1: the pane, and you might have leaped to the logical 7 00:00:24,239 --> 00:00:27,760 Speaker 1: sounding conclusion that the glass had flowed into that shape 8 00:00:27,920 --> 00:00:31,880 Speaker 1: very slowly, over a couple of centuries. That while the 9 00:00:31,920 --> 00:00:35,800 Speaker 1: window frames are solid wood and metal, the glass is 10 00:00:35,960 --> 00:00:40,320 Speaker 1: a liquid, oh if a highly viscous, very slow flowing one. 11 00:00:41,120 --> 00:00:43,600 Speaker 1: You might have even heard this explanation from a teacher 12 00:00:43,720 --> 00:00:47,479 Speaker 1: or read it in a textbook. The truth, however, is 13 00:00:47,520 --> 00:00:51,400 Speaker 1: that the glass has always been that way. Okay, So, 14 00:00:51,520 --> 00:00:54,240 Speaker 1: up through the eighteen hundreds, panes of glass were made 15 00:00:54,240 --> 00:00:57,880 Speaker 1: by hand. Glass blowers used what's called the Crown process. 16 00:00:58,360 --> 00:01:01,400 Speaker 1: Here's how it works. That take a flattened bubble of 17 00:01:01,560 --> 00:01:05,280 Speaker 1: very hot glass and rotate it so fast that centrifugal 18 00:01:05,480 --> 00:01:09,119 Speaker 1: force would spin it out into a large, mostly flat disk. 19 00:01:09,800 --> 00:01:12,240 Speaker 1: The disc would be thicker at the edges, and each 20 00:01:12,319 --> 00:01:14,839 Speaker 1: pain cut from it was bound to be a little 21 00:01:14,840 --> 00:01:18,319 Speaker 1: bit lumpy, and workers tended to install them with a 22 00:01:18,400 --> 00:01:23,000 Speaker 1: thicker side down, probably because the slightly larger edge provided 23 00:01:23,120 --> 00:01:27,640 Speaker 1: better balance. So the glass in those old panes isn't 24 00:01:27,680 --> 00:01:31,960 Speaker 1: flowing at least not that researchers can discern. They've looked 25 00:01:32,000 --> 00:01:34,880 Speaker 1: at samples of glass from two thousand years ago and 26 00:01:34,959 --> 00:01:40,399 Speaker 1: haven't found any telltale evidence of flow. So glass is 27 00:01:40,560 --> 00:01:44,119 Speaker 1: not a liquid, but it's not a normal solid either. 28 00:01:45,160 --> 00:01:50,120 Speaker 1: Scientifically speaking, glass is considered an amorphous solid. That means 29 00:01:50,160 --> 00:01:53,520 Speaker 1: it's atoms and molecules are locked into place, alike in 30 00:01:53,600 --> 00:01:57,880 Speaker 1: a solid, but those molecules are arranged more randomly than 31 00:01:57,920 --> 00:02:02,000 Speaker 1: in most solids, a more similar to a liquid. If 32 00:02:02,080 --> 00:02:04,440 Speaker 1: you wanted to get into semantics, you could sort of 33 00:02:04,480 --> 00:02:08,000 Speaker 1: call glass a super cooled liquid. That's a liquid that's 34 00:02:08,000 --> 00:02:11,080 Speaker 1: been cooled below it's melting point carefully so that it 35 00:02:11,120 --> 00:02:15,160 Speaker 1: doesn't crystallize, and that's part of making glass. In its 36 00:02:15,160 --> 00:02:19,079 Speaker 1: liquid stage, glasses hundreds of degrees above room temperature. It's 37 00:02:19,080 --> 00:02:22,560 Speaker 1: then cooled rapidly and carefully in a process known as quenching, 38 00:02:22,880 --> 00:02:26,120 Speaker 1: until it transitions into the rigid, amorphous solid that we 39 00:02:26,440 --> 00:02:29,560 Speaker 1: know and love. So you might say that glass is 40 00:02:29,600 --> 00:02:33,040 Speaker 1: its own state of matter. Neither a liquid nor a solid. 41 00:02:38,240 --> 00:02:40,880 Speaker 1: Today's episode was written by me and William Harris and 42 00:02:40,919 --> 00:02:43,280 Speaker 1: produced by Tyler Clay. For more on this and that's 43 00:02:43,280 --> 00:02:46,320 Speaker 1: of other translucent topics, visit how stuff works dot com. 44 00:02:46,400 --> 00:02:48,720 Speaker 1: Brain Stuff is production of I heart Radio. For more 45 00:02:48,720 --> 00:02:51,280 Speaker 1: podcasts from my heart Radio, visit the iHeart Radio app, 46 00:02:51,320 --> 00:02:54,040 Speaker 1: Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.