If you push the plunger of a syringe filled with air and let go, it will come back up again! :) :P
when you push the plunger are the air particles closer together in the syringe or in the bubble
It pushes back with an equal force (10 N). If it can not, then it falls over.
Matter changes both its shape and volume when it is in a gaseous state. Imagine oxygen: if you have a syringe full of oxygen, the oxygen is in the shape of the syringe, but if you let it out, it would readily lose this shape as it escaped into the environment. If you do not let it out, and instead push the syringe, you are compressing the oxygen; in other words, you are making the volume of the oxygen smaller by making it more dense. Oxygen, as with any other gas, does not have a fixed shape or volume.
It's a push
In physics, a push or pull on an object is called a force.
When you push the plunger of a syringe down into a marshmallow, it puffs up with air. When you pull the plunger of the syringe up while it is in the marshmallow, it will shrink.
The mass in the syringe, as you push down the plunger.
when you push the plunger are the air particles closer together in the syringe or in the bubble
yes you can, because the molecules of the air are loosely packed enough to be compacted or moved.
It feels hard because all of the air particles are getting closer and closer so they are trying to push the plunger up for more room.
It means to give an injection now. Think of "pushing" a plunger on a syringe.
So that there wouldnt be any air in the syringe. because if just a little bit of air is injected into your body, you'll die
Sucralfate is a gastroprotectant that is thought to help with digestive upset by coating the stomach lining to prevent damage to the gastric mucus from high levels of stomach acid. The easiest way to mix sucralfate slurry is to pull the plunger out of the back of a 10 or 30 cc oral syringe, drop the pills into the body of the syringe, place the index finger of your left (non-dominant) hand over the tip of the syringe, fill the syringe halfway or so with water, put the plunger back into the body of the syringe (careful, it's a tight fit) then shake the syringe to dissolve the pills in the water. Then run a large stream of water from the tap and draw the rest of the water needed to make the proper volume into the syringe. Shake again, with your index finger over the opening of the syringe tip, then administer orally. From experience, this is a messy procedure until you get used to the syringe flip in the middle - you can just barely get the seal of the plunger back into the syringe then have to carefully flip the syringe over and push some of the air out to get the plunger fully seated in the syringe again. Then, of course, most animals don't seem to like the taste of sucralfate and are more likely to spit it back out on you rather than swallow it.
Is it to push and pull the gas into the syringe or something else?
Is it to push and pull the gas into the syringe or something else?
Is it to push and pull the gas into the syringe or something else?
It feels hard because all of the air particles are getting closer and closer so they are trying to push the plunger up for more room.