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Thread: Polarizers and Image Noise

  1. #21

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    Re: Polarizers and Image Noise

    Quote Originally Posted by davidedric View Post
    resident geek here
    It's always helpful to have a geek in residence. I had no idea that pure water does not conduct electricity. Is pure water defined as any material that contains two parts of hydrogen for every part of oxygen and nothing else?

  2. #22
    davidedric's Avatar
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    Re: Polarizers and Image Noise

    Is pure water defined as any material that contains two parts of hydrogen for every part of oxygen and nothing else?
    Yes (leaving aside any physical aspects such as isotopes), provided that they are combined into H2O molecules. So a simple mixture of the gases in that ratio wouldn't be, but add a spark and you'd get a big bang - and water.

    Though it could of course be water, ice or steam

  3. #23
    GiacomoD's Avatar
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    Re: Polarizers and Image Noise

    Quote Originally Posted by Mike Buckley View Post
    It's always helpful to have a geek in residence. I had no idea that pure water does not conduct electricity. Is pure water defined as any material that contains two parts of hydrogen for every part of oxygen and nothing else?
    Yes Mike,
    no salts, no particles, no micro-organisms, only H2O molecules. No ions, no electricity But, in practice, it exists only in chemical laboratories.

  4. #24
    Moderator Manfred M's Avatar
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    Re: Polarizers and Image Noise

    Distilled water or de-ionized water are for all intents "pure water", but you won't find that in nature. The closest you'll come to that is rain water. Water is the "universal solvent", so all kinds of dissolved minerals and suspended organic matter are found in most surface water that we see in our photography.

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