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plunger
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
Syringe is the thing with the pointy tip and the injection is the way you insert drugs into the body (via syringe).
what is 0.16 ml in a syringe
This is a badly phrased question. 3 cc = 3ml. a millilitre is a centimetre cubed and that is exactly what cc means. if the syringe takes a max of 3ml, then 3.125 is a full syringe and a 1/24th of a syringe
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.
Measure to the edge of the plunger (or piston) where it touches the inside of the syringe cylinder. http://www.northcumbriahealth.nhs.uk/palliativecare/clinical/syringe/05.php
he pushes the plunger so that he removes the air molecules from the syringe and make it vacuum and then puts it in the medicine and pulls the plunger so that the liquid rises without the air molecules getting in the syringe (arjun)
when you push the plunger are the air particles closer together in the syringe or in the bubble
To ensure that the plunger can move and not stuck. Because if it is stuck, when the gas goes into the syringe, the plunger will not move back and so the values you received will be lower than the actual value
If you push the plunger of a syringe filled with air and let go, it will come back up again! :) :P
The pressure generated by a syringe is a result of how hard the plunger is pushed and the internal diameter of the needle, not the size of the syringe.
The easiest way I have found is to pull the plunger out of a large syringe (60 cc works great). Drop the tablet(s) into the front of the syringe and put the plunger back in. Run tap water from a faucet and stick the tip of the syringe into the running water. Pull back on the plunger to get 20-30 ccs of water in the syringe - it should be about half full. Turn off the faucet and place your index finger over the tip of the syringe. Shake until the tablets are dissolved, then use the syringe to "inject" the slurry into your dog's mouth.
When the plunger is pulled, the volume inside increases. This reduces the pressure inside, and the air pressure outside forces liquid in, in an effort to make the pressure inside and outside the syringe equal again.
A syringe with a calibrated barrel, plunger, and tip, used with a hypodermic needle for hypodermic injections and for aspiration. (Medical Dictionary)
plunger