I personally am inclined to believe glass is a supercooled liquid. It contains no crystalline structure. That's why all century-old windows are thick at the bottom.
What does everyone think?
English
#Offtopic
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1 ReplyThat myth has already been *puts on sunglasses* Shattered. [spoiler][url=https://media4.giphy.com/media/2p2eE5UYmXjG0/200_s.gif]B)[/url][/spoiler]
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Edited by ELITE444: 8/23/2015 2:17:14 AMLol all our windows are melting, the end is nigh.
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2 RepliesSSSSSNNNNNNNAAAAAAAAAKKKEEEEEEE!!! [spoiler]i voted solid but to my understanding glass is a slow moving liquid. [/spoiler]
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The reason old glass glass is thick at the bottom is because glass craters were terrible as making perfect panes, normally leaving a thicker side.
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Bruh.
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Edited by LeftwardOwl: 8/23/2015 1:20:43 AMThe reason old windows are thicker because they are not made by a manufacturer with a metal machine to make it even so it's thicker on one side the reason that it is thicker at the bottom is because they placed the thicker side down for balance
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Look at that poll.
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It actually gas for your information.
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Centuries-old windows were constructed by spinning a sheet of molten glass like a pizza dough, causing the outside of the ring to be thicker. The sheets were then cut into panes, and the heavier parts were placed at the bottom. Glass does not flow like water at an extremely slow rate, in fact it is made in a similar way to many metals. Melting large quantities of a raw material to make it dense and usable. It's just packed sands.
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It's actually a subset of a state of matter.
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Glass is glass
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No. Gas is a gas
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Why no option for gas?
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6 RepliesEdited by Sheogorath : 8/23/2015 12:52:53 AMI'm inclined to believe that OP is retarded
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2 RepliesThat's like asking if ice is a solid
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Naked.
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1 ReplyEdited by Kpachi RAMASAMA: 8/23/2015 12:33:31 AMSo basically it is the same as how supercooled water is ice
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Neither a super dense non-Newtonian fluid maybe or supercooled fluid like you said
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Naked.
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Liquid