Ziggurat
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2003
- Messages
- 61,641
Pressure is never negative. It's always positive, but can be written as negative when it's less than a greater positive pressure to make math simpler.
That's simply not true. Water, for example, can support negative pressures of magnitudes significantly larger than 1 atmosphere. And that is absolute negative pressures, not negative relative to atmosphere. This is possible because water molecules attract each other, so they can pull on each other, not just push. It's basically the bulk equivalent of surface tension. There's a limit to this negative pressure, because beyond a certain tension the water will simply pull apart, but water definitely can go to significant negative absolute pressure.