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RE: The Cool Science of the Slippery Ice

in #stemng6 years ago

This is a great article. You completely explained the science of skippery nature of ice.

They observed that the surface of the ice has highly mobile water molecules which facilitates the slipperiness of it when it comes in contact with a ski.

This makes so much sense that it is difficult to doubt it. Science have come a long way, and it feels great to know that every field of scientific interest has real life applications.

I wonder how you were able to get those images to the left and right sides? Will like to know the formatting commands.

Thanks

Sort:  

The markdown may look scary but it is simple once you get to see how it got to be that way. If you change the left to right in the "pull-left" syntax of the markdown, the image will be aligned to the right side of your blog. Here is the markdown here which you can copy and paste and edit the links as appropriate:

<div class="pull-left"> <center><img src="https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmT4dZawC6SCoW7oLHnApR1CvmCmLN6oK5i53uVM1kkX4Q/image.png"> <sub><br><br>A road sign warns Users of slippery sature when the temperature drops. Image credits: By <a href="https://www.flickr.com/people/22168167@N00">By abdallahh from Montréal, Canada (Gaspé)<a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0">CC BY 2.0</a> from Wikipedia Commons, <a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Phase_diagram_of_water.svg">Link</a></a></sub></center></div>

8 September 2018 193334 GMT+0100.jpg

Link in green colour: uploaded image url
Link in red color: the attribution to the original owner of image.
Link encircled by blue color: Image licence
Link encircled by black color: Image Source URL

Great explanation. Thanks for being awesome. Gonna have to try this out!

That will be awesome.