I think that water that is warmer than its surrounding will experience greater 
convection; this means that the water is set into a more vigorous motion that 
is sustained even as the temperature difference passes that of the more-still, 
originally colder water.

 

Scott

 


 


Date: Sat, 10 Apr 2010 14:23:41 -0400
From: jedrothw...@gmail.com
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: [Vo]:New paper on Mpemba effect

Remarkably consistent results. See:

http://arxiv.org/abs/1003.3185

A search for the Mpemba effect: When hot water freezes faster then cold water

James D. Brownridge

(Submitted on 16 Mar 2010)


Abstract

An explanation for why hot water will sometime freeze more rapidly than cold 
water is offered. Two specimens of water from the same source will often have 
different spontaneous freezing temperatures; that is, the temperature at which 
freezing begins. When both specimens supercool and the spontaneous freezing 
temperature of the hot water is higher than that of the cold water, then the 
hot water will usually freeze first, if all other conditions are equal and 
remain so during cooling. The probability that the hot water will freeze first 
if it has the higher spontaneous freezing temperature will be larger for a 
larger difference in spontaneous freezing temperature. Heating the water may 
lower, raise or not change the spontaneous freezing temperature. The keys to 
observing hot water freezing before cold water are supercooling the water and 
having a significant difference in the spontaneous freezing temperature of the 
two water specimens. We observed hot water freezing before cold water 28 times 
in 28 attempts under the conditions described here.


- Jed

                                          
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