Why do people recommend separating drinking glasses that are stuck together by cooling the inner glass and heating the outer glass?

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I have seen mutliple people recommend this. Here is why it confused me:

If you had a large balloon stuck in the center of an inner-tube, and you wanted to separate them quickly, you would want both the baloon and the inner-tube to contract toward their centers.

If the baloon was slowly deflating (by losing air or cooling down), and you wanted it to stay stuck, you would want the inner-tube to inflate (by adding air or heating up) in order to keep its grip.

So, why are people recommending to expand one glass while shrinking the other? Won’t that just maintain the grip by the outer glass? Don’t we want to cool both glasses, so they both take up less space, creating air between them?

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4 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

If you had a balloon stuck in the center of an inner tube, you would overinflate the tube (so that the void in the center got larger) and underinflate the balloon (so that its radius was smaller) and thereby free the balloon.

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