Kitchen Sink Science
Have you ever noticed that boiling water is quieter than cold water?
Over the years, I have noticed that when pouring boiling water into the sink (for example, when draining pasta), the noise is noticeably quieter and softer than when I pour cold water.
I always pour into a stainless steel sink, not a plastic or ceramic one.
To me it makes sense because the density of water at 100oC is 958 kKg/m3 versus 999 or 998 Kg/m3 for water at 10 or 20oC respectively.
That makes boiling water about 4% less dense than cold tap water, or ... maybe I am the one who is dense because no one else ever seems to hear the difference.
As usual, I have no published science to back this up. It is something I have never seen documented anywhere. But it is something I have observed and this is my best explanation.
You can explore the density of water at various temperatures and salinity here.
Image nabbed from here.
Over the years, I have noticed that when pouring boiling water into the sink (for example, when draining pasta), the noise is noticeably quieter and softer than when I pour cold water.
I always pour into a stainless steel sink, not a plastic or ceramic one.
To me it makes sense because the density of water at 100oC is 958 kKg/m3 versus 999 or 998 Kg/m3 for water at 10 or 20oC respectively.
That makes boiling water about 4% less dense than cold tap water, or ... maybe I am the one who is dense because no one else ever seems to hear the difference.
As usual, I have no published science to back this up. It is something I have never seen documented anywhere. But it is something I have observed and this is my best explanation.
You can explore the density of water at various temperatures and salinity here.
Image nabbed from here.
Comments
Our plumbing is weird and old. Every time we do laundry, which is right below our kitchen sink in the basement, we hear loud gurgling glugging in the sink pipes. I expect clothes to come up through thr sink!
MOI: you can easily replicate and control the conditions. I know I have. Fill a kettle with cold water and pour it out into the sink. Next fill the kettle and bring to a boil. Pour the boiling water out into the sink. I hear a difference. The boiling water makes a quieter and softer sound.
barbara: I just noticed it sounded different. Of course, there are many times I don't notice things at all.
If you think you heard a difference, without having been prompted to hear it, I would say there is a good chance you definitely heard something different.