Two contributors, Adrian Harvey and wirelessduck report, on a long-running experiment that has taken 84 years for someone to observe:
The pitch drop experiment at the University of Queensland has finally been observed producing a drop. Widely considered the world's longest running experiment, it was started 83 years ago in 1927. It was designed to show that even some solid-seeming substances like pitch will flow like a liquid given sufficient time. The flow is about an order of magnitude slower than the continental drift of the ground it's on! The experiment has produced drops before, but only when no one was watching. The last drop in 2000 even had a WebCam set up to watch it but the power went out just when the drop fell.
The pitch has dropped - again. This time, the glimpse of a falling blob of tar, also called pitch, represents the first result for the world's longest-running experiment. Sadly however, the glimpse comes too late for a former custodian, who watched over the experiment for more than half a century and died a year ago. Up-and-running since 1930, the experiment is based at the University of Queensland in Australia and seeks to capture blobs of pitch as they drip down, agonisingly slowly, from their parent bulk.
[Editor's Note: The discrepancy in the dates between the two articles is as they were reported. Obviously, at least 1 is incorrect, but the TFS does not change source material]
(Score: 2) by aristarchus on Thursday April 24 2014, @07:22AM
Can we do it with glass now? Please? I want to see glass drops! It may take a bit longer than the current experiment, but that is no reason not to try! And after that, any not crystalline plastic material, like gum, or snot!
(Score: 4, Informative) by wonkey_monkey on Thursday April 24 2014, @07:38AM
No [cmog.org], we [io9.com] can't [glassnotes.com]. That is a reason not to try.
systemd is Roko's Basilisk
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 24 2014, @09:24AM
wut? go to church, bro.. you can watch (look at) stained glass running like jello in the sun all day long. i think i missed the point(s) *goes back to start and does not collect 200 dollahs.*
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 24 2014, @09:54AM
OK, i went back and read all the articles. the counter-evidence posted is BOLLOCKS. totally one-sided and based on the views of a small group of "scientists". we're not talking about fossilized amber, that's a whole 'nother jar of worms, and on a timeframe of "well beyond the age of the universe" glass is likely to transmute into entirely different elements or at very least decompose. now from personal experience i've seen stainded glass windows in churches that have ran like candle wax and sagged onto the ledging well outside of the lead framing. I dunno why, maybe stained glass is softer, or maybe there was a fire at some point that superheated the windows, or maybe the nazis had a top secret anti-window faction that went around the globe with flame throwers and unsuccessfully tried to melt all the story-glass after they were done burning books, or may be it was due to blast jets from recent visitations by ancient aliens.. i dunno, but i'd buy any of those stories over my T-89 pocket calculator says NO. /endrant
(Score: 1) by evk on Thursday April 24 2014, @06:20PM
Yes, church would be right place for old myths.