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/sci/ - Science & Math


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8278546 No.8278546 [Reply] [Original]

Would it be possible to get your teeth to such a cold temperature that they would shatter upon drinking a hot cup of coffee?

>> No.8278559

>>8278546
yes
/thread

>> No.8278581

Maybe

>> No.8278584

No OP, the laws of physics don't allow it. /s

Fucking mong

>> No.8278593

>>8278559
>>8278584
baka gaijin
/thread /s /t /u /v /... /[math]- \frac{1}{12}[/math]

>> No.8278601

>>8278584
but thermal shock is a thing right, why won't it apply to teeth?

>> No.8278650

>>8278601
Why won't it apply to ceramic? It does it's just the temperatures are different. Also keep in mind that teeth are a composite material so they probably wouldn't quite shatter and a lot of the stuff in them probably behaves strangely (or at least relatively different) in extreme temperatures.

>> No.8278677

It would be extremely painful

>> No.8278680

>>8278650
>Why won't it apply to ceramic?

It does apply to ceramic you moron.

>> No.8278867
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8278867

>>8278546
Seeing how your teeth have capillaries running through them, your teeth would crack apart during cooling--due to your blood freezing and expanding--far before you would approach a temperature where such shattering is feasible.

>> No.8278868

>>8278680
Wow you didn't even read the rest of my post before you banged that reply out. Is reading that hard for you? Of course it applies to ceramic that's why I mentioned it.

>> No.8278902

>>8278677
You're a big guy