Abstract
When we speak of “clean liquid surfaces” our meaning is often subtly different from considerations of “clean solid surfaces.” In most solid surface cases, what we require is a surface that is “pure”, i.e., composed solely of molecules of the desired substance.(1) Although there is a corresponding need for “pure” liquid surfaces in basic research, where delicate measurements of surface tension are related to intermolecular forces, what we require more often is a liquid surface whose fluid mechanics is simply specified or well defined.
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