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Database: Prince Rupert Drops: Difference between revisions

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A teardrop shaped glass bead with a tail, this astonishing object delighted Europeans in the 17th century. Popularized in England by Prince Rupert who gave a few of them to Charles II in 1660, these drops are made by immersing molten glass in cold water. The outside of the glass quickly forms a shell that incases the pressure of the still-expanding molten glass within. Once the entirety has cooled, the glass shell is holding back enormous pressure and the bead can easily withstand hammer-blows. However, there is a glass tail to the drop, that when broken, releases all the energy, immediately reducing the drop to a fine, glass powder.
A teardrop shaped glass bead with a tail, this astonishing object delighted [[Europe]]ans in the 17th century. Popularized in [[Great Britain|England]] by Prince Rupert who gave a few of them to Charles II in 1660, these drops are made by immersing molten glass in cold water. The outside of the glass quickly forms a shell that incases the pressure of the still-expanding molten glass within. Once the entirety has cooled, the glass shell is holding back enormous pressure and the bead can easily withstand hammer-blows. However, there is a glass tail to the drop, that when broken, releases all the energy, immediately reducing the drop to a fine, glass powder.
[[Category:Database/ACU]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Prince Rupert Drops}}
[[Category:Database: Items]]
[[Category:Helix database entries]]

Revision as of 22:26, 1 March 2015

A teardrop shaped glass bead with a tail, this astonishing object delighted Europeans in the 17th century. Popularized in England by Prince Rupert who gave a few of them to Charles II in 1660, these drops are made by immersing molten glass in cold water. The outside of the glass quickly forms a shell that incases the pressure of the still-expanding molten glass within. Once the entirety has cooled, the glass shell is holding back enormous pressure and the bead can easily withstand hammer-blows. However, there is a glass tail to the drop, that when broken, releases all the energy, immediately reducing the drop to a fine, glass powder.