Only if you throw it really, really hard. The “white part” is usually just common ceramic, and has no special glass-shattering properties that I know of. If your brother isn’t full of it, the glass he shattered was probably ready to do so anyway.
Ummm… I don’t understand your confusion; throwing things at glass can break it, a little piece of gravel can break a windscreen if it hits hard enough.
I can’t speak to the why of it, but I can vouch for the window-shattering abilities of a small piece of hurled ceramic.
My wife’s car stereo was stolen and the police officer who responded determined that the culprit had thrown a small piece of ceramic from a spark plug through the glass.
The officer noted that stereo thieves use this tactic frequently because it is effective, quick and–interestingly–relatively noiseless.
The ceramic of a spark plug will easily shatter automobile glass if propelled by a sling shot. A group of teens near where I live were arrested and charged with mulitple auto breakins. They might have gotten away with it till the police found a couple hundred spark plugs missing the ceramic behind one of the teens home. The teens even had a couple auto repair shops saving old spark plugs for them.
I’ve heard the same thing. I don’t think the force of the impact is supposed to have anything to do with it. After searching the web, most sites that mention this are vandalism and burglary tutorials. But this site lists an exerpt from the Journal Of Forensic Sciences:
Tempered glass can be remarkably hard to break if you strike it with a blunt object. I’ve done a similar experiment with an old side window from my VW rabbit and a ball peen hammer. I eventually gave up trying to break it with the hammer. A sharp, hardened point like on a broken spark plug or a center punch will do the trick with remarkably little force. Remember that tempered glass is under stress between the core and surface. That’s what makes it break into small pieces when shattered where ordinary glass will break into large jagged pieces. A small chip in in tempered glass forms a stress riser that allows the stress in the glass to do the rest of the work.