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Judging by these comments: People do know that lava lamps don't have actual lava in them, right?
You never know
Physics question: since sand in an hourglass exerts more force when it’s flowing downward than it does at rest, will the rising and falling of the wax make the chandelier very slightly wobble? 🤔
That is super interesting about the hourglass. I never considered that, but it makes sense. The sand is transitioning from a higher energy state to a lower one within a gravitational field. Each grain gains momentum during the fall, then exerts that force on the structure when it hits the bottom.
The lava lamps don't start in a stored energy state. They add thermal energy that causes the convection, but the entire time there's a conservation of momentum within the lamps.
It's super cool idea, but I'm pretty sure the chandelier would be stable, not wobbly.
The water in the lava lamp does the opposite so it balances out.
That only makes this idea better.
Not likely enough to be noticeable without special extremely sensitive instruments. The wax has low mass and is moving slowly. The glass container has high mass and is at rest. Mathematically, you could derive how much the lamp moves when a wax blob hits the top of the glass. In practice, it's likely to be negligible.
lavalabra!
Lavalampaleire
The glass lava part is fairly easy to remove. I'd be so worried about something knocking those down on somebody's head.
That lamp cord is gonna burn up edit: wrong they only use like a 20w bulb apparently, carry on
My first thought was the power usage as well.
all i see is potential for third-degree burns
[Chorus]
🎶 I'm gonna swing from the chandelieer
From the chandelieeeeer 🎶