metallichydra Posted July 21, 2019 Share Posted July 21, 2019 sometimes the water is a little weird: more water in one tile than another. but as far as i know, the water prefers to be in one of the sides. as we can see here, there is more water in one of the sides. and this seem to apply to all natural lakes i find. except when there is pockets of gas inside the lake. Link to comment https://forums.kleientertainment.com/forums/topic/109153-water-mass-difference/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
Coolthulhu Posted July 21, 2019 Share Posted July 21, 2019 From what I can tell it works like this: For as long as liquid mass difference between two tiles is larger than viscosity, the liquid flows from larger to smaller The above exchange occurs only between horizontally-adjacent tiles; trapped gas prevents horizontal adjacency Some liquids have different viscosity - you can check it by dripping some of the liquid on a single tile and checking how much stays There is also vertical exchange, but this only matters if you have 'U'-shaped bends. Then pressure will ensure that the difference in water level between two (or more) "legs" of the 'U' is at most 1. Link to comment https://forums.kleientertainment.com/forums/topic/109153-water-mass-difference/#findComment-1229374 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nostas Posted July 21, 2019 Share Posted July 21, 2019 0,1g... perhaps the asteroids gravity tends a little bit to the right side xD and weird water, onis water like to stick heavily on surfaces. yep its weird. edit: yep i missed the k, its meant to be 0,1 kg^^ Link to comment https://forums.kleientertainment.com/forums/topic/109153-water-mass-difference/#findComment-1229377 Share on other sites More sharing options...
SakuraKoi Posted July 21, 2019 Share Posted July 21, 2019 20 minutes ago, Nostas said: 0,1g... perhaps the asteroids gravity tends a little bit to the right side xD well, apart from that is is about 100g, this rather makes me consider the theory that the asteroid is moving counter clock wise or the close by destinations tend to be on the right side. But I am no scientist and have no idea whether and how much the concept of inertia applies since after all... Apart from humans constantly moving at up to 1670 km/h the closer they are to the equator, we also move at 108 000 km/h around the sun... and 792 000 km/h around our galaxy... with the galaxy itself moving at 1 987 000 km/h. Science: 29 minutes ago, Nostas said: yep its weird I just hope the earth does do no sudden and ful stop. One side would be flattened and I expect the other one to "fall" into space, I won't argue about which fate is worse. Though when the sun "dies", that one will probably be much worse, remind me not that immortality will lead to immolation. That's the reason why I don't want to know more even if I could make it through a science course, it's more scary to know more than less, unless it is Philosophy, then you just despair (especially since it tends to make one able to learn at a faster speed, even just after the first semester with logic and language as subjects... and then comes stuff like metaphysics and ethics which for the better or worse make sense). I love ONI physics, they are silly, the good kind of stupid. Some semblance of logic applies, it could practically be used for education but it is more fun than anything (which actually makes it also suitable for education). In any event, previously heavier gasses also tended to move to the right, creating pockets there. They, the devs, did deliberately change that to be much more even but some bias still remains. Link to comment https://forums.kleientertainment.com/forums/topic/109153-water-mass-difference/#findComment-1229385 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Exa Posted July 21, 2019 Share Posted July 21, 2019 waves Link to comment https://forums.kleientertainment.com/forums/topic/109153-water-mass-difference/#findComment-1229390 Share on other sites More sharing options...
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