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It Freezes ! :P
Nothing. The glass gets colder. If the bottle is full of water or some other liquid it may split if the pressure of the growing ice crystals cannot be relieved by the bottles geometry or if the bottle is tightly sealed. Interestingly, if the bottle has parallel sidees and a wide mouth the pressure on the ice from the sides will melt the ice allowing it to move upwards relieving the pressure. This used to happen in days of milk delivery when milk bottle would freexe on the steps to homes, the ice would be forced out of the bottle's mouth to form a tower of milk ove the lip of the bottle.
There are a couple of types. By far the most common is the aneroid barometer. The heart of an aneroid barometer is a sealed can. As the surrounding pressure rises and falls, the can shrinks and expands. A mechanical linkage translates the deflection into the movement of a dial. It could also be measured with a strain gauge, with the resistance translated into pressure.The Mercury barometer has a tube sealed at the top, full of mercury sitting in a cup full of mercury. A vacuum forms at the top because the exterior pressure can only support a column equal to the height times the density of mercury.Air pressure pushes on the mercury inside of the container, the mercury moves up the glass tube. The greater the air pressure the higher the mercury will rise.
Most all items swell somewhat with heat applied. Water does so dramatically. So when a full and sealed container cools, the water retracts in size accordingly. This changes the pressure within the container, so the pressure on the outside is greater and causes it to collapse
Before the surgery, a full medical exam is usually done to assess any specific health problems, such as diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, or stroke
Explode
Sure. Take a sealed balloon full of air. Keep changing its pressure and temperature, and keep track of what happens to its volume.
Sure. Take a sealed balloon full of air. Keep changing its pressure and temperature, and keep track of what happens to its volume.
It Freezes ! :P
Nothing. The glass gets colder. If the bottle is full of water or some other liquid it may split if the pressure of the growing ice crystals cannot be relieved by the bottles geometry or if the bottle is tightly sealed. Interestingly, if the bottle has parallel sidees and a wide mouth the pressure on the ice from the sides will melt the ice allowing it to move upwards relieving the pressure. This used to happen in days of milk delivery when milk bottle would freexe on the steps to homes, the ice would be forced out of the bottle's mouth to form a tower of milk ove the lip of the bottle.
It depends on the terms of the contract to purchase the freezer that you signed when ordering it.
That would depend on whether the balloon was empty, full of air or full of water and as you have not told us which we can not help you. When asking questions please make them specific if you want us to help.
Yes
Strangely enough fridges and feezers actually need to have stuff inside them to work properly. A fridge or a freezer will work best when they are about 60-75% full. If they are too empty or too full then they won't be as cold.
you put them in a tank full of liquid hydrogen just kidding you put them in a freezer of course. you put them in a tank full of liquid hydrogen just kidding you put them in a freezer of course.
There are a couple of types. By far the most common is the aneroid barometer. The heart of an aneroid barometer is a sealed can. As the surrounding pressure rises and falls, the can shrinks and expands. A mechanical linkage translates the deflection into the movement of a dial. It could also be measured with a strain gauge, with the resistance translated into pressure.The Mercury barometer has a tube sealed at the top, full of mercury sitting in a cup full of mercury. A vacuum forms at the top because the exterior pressure can only support a column equal to the height times the density of mercury.Air pressure pushes on the mercury inside of the container, the mercury moves up the glass tube. The greater the air pressure the higher the mercury will rise.
Because the freezer is full of magazines.