• thebestaquaman@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    It relies on differences in surface tension. If a liquid has a lower surface tension (energy) towards one surface than another, you get the typical capillary effect. In the case of water, the water-air energy is lower than the water-<whatever your capillary is made of> energy, so you get a capillary effect.

    If water had exactly zero surface tension against every interface,

    • it would not exhibit any capillary action
    • life on earth would cease to exist quite quickly
    • your socks would remain dry