You Can't Feel Wet
Veritasium
0:00 Try this.
0:00 Put on a latex glove and then put your hand into ice cold water.
0:04 You'll notice it still feels wet.
0:08 But that's strange because the glove is impermeable to water,
0:11 but it still feels wet.
0:12 That's because we actually don't have a way to directly measure wetness.
0:15 Instead, we use temperature changes as a proxy.
0:18 And that works most of the time because
0:19 water conducts heat 23 times faster than air.
0:22 So your skin touches water, it pulls away heat,
0:25 and your brain interprets that loss of heat as wet.
0:28 And that's why 15°ree water feels a lot colder than 15 degree air.
0:32 As long as it kept us dry enough to survive and to not die of hypothermia,
0:36 this heat trick was good enough.
0:38 But not so for insects.
0:39 At these scales, water is dangerously [music] sticky.
0:42 So many insects adapted these microscopic hairs
0:45 which deform in the presence of moisture.
0:47 And this let them detect [music] water directly.
0:49 So flies actually know something we don't.