No, unless the moon suddenly gained an atmosphere and grew oxygen out of no where, unless that happened that would be an impossible feat.
(The oxygen would only be required to breathe. Ignoring that requirement, any atmospheric pressure would suffice.)
Liquid is never "sucked" through straw into your mouth, instead it is pushed by the atmospheric pressure. Without an atmosphere pushing on the liquid in the cup, nothing would ever move. (Actually, quite the opposite would happen if you had any air in your mouth to begin with: the air would blast out of your mouth into the straw and spray the liquid everywhere all over the Moon.)
If, however, you were in the lunar module drinking through a straw would be easier than on Earth. Astronauts perform a similar feat all the time, even in a weightless environment orbiting the earth.
Yes. The astronauts lived for up to 3 days on the moon. They ate inside the Lunar Module before and after their moonwalks. The asatronauts spent almost 8 hours in their suits, and the work they performed was very strenuous. They neeeded something to keep then hydrated. During their moonwalks, they ate from a fruit bar that was attached inside their space suits. They also drank water or Orange Juice to keep hydrated while walking on the moon.
The only astronaut unable to drink during his moonwalk was Apollo 15 LMP Jim Irwin, who was unable to get his straw unclogged. He suffered a very mild heart attack while working on the moon because of lack of hydration. His heart attack was so mild in fact that he wasn't informed of it until after Apollo 15 splashed down in the Pacific Ocean.
Drinking though a straw requires making the pressure inside your mouth lower than the pressure outside, which forces the drink up the straw and into your mouth. The moon has no atmosphere, so the pressure there is already zero.
Most definitely. The astronauts had things to drink (water or orange juice) inside their suit while they were walking on the moon. They also had fruit or nut bars to eat. They were in the suits almost 8 hours. The only astronaut unable to drink during his moonwalk was Jim Irwin (Apollo 15 LMP) because his straw was clogged.
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However, that was inside a space suit (or the Lunar Lander) where there is AIR. If you were outside, with no space suit, you could not suck thru a straw, since there is no air pressure to push liquid through the straw.
No, as there is no atmosphere on the Moon drinking juice from a straw will not work for the following reasons.
Yes, if all the aforementioned problems are curtailed (such as smuggling a juice fruit contained up to the Moon in a pressured space suit. Then the astronaut inside the space suit could suck up the orange juice perfectly well. Anita would have to tell him/her it was there of course.)
That would depend on the exact situation. The reason sipping works is that the outside air pressure pushes on the water pushes it up in the straw when there is less pressure in the straw.Living under an artificial atmosphere, that should work on Mars as well.
On the other hand, the natural atmosphere on Mars wouldn't provide much pressure.
Anyplace where you could breath - yes. In "raw" Mars air - no, its to thin (and you'd be dead).
Not outside your space suit you wouldn't.
Yes. Drinking with a straw will only be easier, as there is less gravity to hold down the juice.
we can not drink cold drink through straw at moon because moon has no atmosphere to exert pressure on liquid
When you suck on a straw you generate low pressure, so that means the pressure outside the straw, by contrast is higher and so matter gets sucked into the straw. On the moon there is no atmosphere and so the pressure is zero. No matter how hard you try you cannot create a pressure of less than zero inside the straw and so no suction can occur.
During the Moon's revolution, an observer in space would see the moon, but would not be able to see it spin around. From far to the north, about the solar system, the moon would appear to make a squiggly
Our moon is made of rocks. If it was gaseous, the astronauts would not have been able to walk on it and pick up rocks.
Yes. Drinking with a straw will only be easier, as there is less gravity to hold down the juice.
No, as there is no atmosphere on the Moon drinking juice from a straw will not work for the following reasons.the water in the juice will boil away in a few seconds due to the depressed boiling point of water.the second law of thermodynamics will disperse the evaporated water radially so no coherent fluid can existwith no external air pressure the process of sucking will produce no negative pressure gradient for the water to follow.the astronaut will not be able to insert the straw into his pressure sealed space suit to attempt to apply a sucking maneuver. Attempting such is ridiculous anyways as the zero pressure of space and would just result in him getting sucked out of his/her space suit.Oranges don't grow on the moon so there is no Orange Juice to be had.Retail stores don't (as yet) exist on the moon so there is no possible way for orange juice to be retailed for foolish astronauts to attempt drinking it. (Or any juice for that matter. The question wasn't specific.)Anita Bryant doesn't live on the Moon so no one would know about orange juice and its virtues to want to attempt such a thing.There is currently an orange juice embargo against the Moon so no orange juice can be imported for anybody to attempt drinking it there. (Tang doesn't count as orange juice.)Yes, if all the aforementioned problems are curtailed (such as smuggling a juice fruit contained up to the Moon in a pressured space suit. Then the astronaut inside the space suit could suck up the orange juice perfectly well. Anita would have to tell him/her it was there of course.)
we can not drink cold drink through straw at moon because moon has no atmosphere to exert pressure on liquid
with a straw
you would be able to jump on the moon. the moon's gravity is 1/6 of earths gravity so there is a bit of gravit but not alot so you will be able to jump abit
If you are inside a spaceship with air around you, it would be just as easy as on Earth. If you are outside in the vacuum, it would not work at all. First off, there would be no air pressure outside to push the drink up the straw into the partial vacuum in your mouth. Also, you would be dead. One thing though. If you are in a spaceship with air, then you need to keep your drink in a juice box or plastic bag, or the lack of gravity would allow the drink to blob away into the air like a lava lamp. In other words, cups are not a good idea!
When you suck on a straw you generate low pressure, so that means the pressure outside the straw, by contrast is higher and so matter gets sucked into the straw. On the moon there is no atmosphere and so the pressure is zero. No matter how hard you try you cannot create a pressure of less than zero inside the straw and so no suction can occur.
The word JUICE has the same vowel sound (oo) as the word MOON. In US English, juice rhymes with moose and June rhymes with moon.
That would be a full moon.
At the new moon.
Not necessarily. Think about it... if you can see a full moon in the middle of the night, then someone on the moon would be able to see your part of the earth.... which would be in darkness.
No there is just very low gravity on the moon so you would be able to jump longer distances and such.