| This is a picture of ball bearings in a petri dish. There is no water in the dish. The balls are randomly distributed by diameter in the dish. | ![]() |
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Water has
been added to the
dish. The water appears pink in the picture because reverse
lighting
was used. Notice the water fills the spaces (called voids or
pores)
between the balls. Click to see a video of water being added: QT, RP. Watch closely to see that the contact points and narrow pores fill first, followed by the larger pores. |
| The line
at the bottom of the
picture is a pipette. It is removing water from the dish much as
a plant root extracts water from the soil. Notice all the pores near
the pipette are still full while some large pores near the top of the
picture
are empty. This video begins the process of water extraction, until three large pores are emptied: QT, RP. Water is moving from the large pores near the top to the pipette at the bottom. Water moves through other water-filled pores. |
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As more water is removed, more large pores are emptied. |
| Most of
the water is now gone
from the pores, especially near the point of removal. The water
near
the top is no longer connected to the water at the bottom by any large
water-filled pores. These dry spots between pockets of water
limit water movement. When this condition occurs in soil, a root is
not able to get much water. These video clips show water being removed from the bottom, then from the top of the picture, as if two separate roots were at work. Bottom: QT, RP Top: QT, RP Even
though the pipette can extract
no more water, there is still water in some of the smaller pores (QT, RP: top right, bottom right, bottom
left).
There is also water at every place two
balls touch (QT, RP). This water is
held by adhesion (attraction of unlike objects) to the balls, and by
cohesion
(attraction of like objects) to other water molecules. These
forces
act like a weak glue holding the balls in contact. (See clip: QT, RP.) |
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