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It will trap the air within it till it tips over, and releases the air.
it will keep going up and the wind will take it somewhere very far away and when the helium runs out it comes down
Both. On the down stroke of a piston pump, the chamber is evacuated, pulling the material in. On the up stroke, it pushes the material out.Similarly, in a turbine pump, low pressure on the intake side pulls and high pressure on the output side pushes.The exception is the mechanism used in bicycle pumps and old-fashioned water pumps (and toilet plungers). In these, half the cycle is wasted as the plunger contracts and goes through the fluid. On the "power stroke", the plunger expands and pushes the fluid out (or in, in the case of the toilet bowl plunger).
down-filled coat
The will move more slowly,
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.
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)
The same way you read ANY syringe. From www.wikipedia.com (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syringes), if you click on the image of the 10ml syringe, you'll see the markings on the barrel. You measure the units of fluid from the needle side back to the plunger - so as you pull back the plunger you draw in "x" ml's of fluid as marked from the needle back. Standard safety procedures surrounding the use of a syringe should always be followed, and in no way is this short answer a full and complete explanation of how to correctly/safely use a syringe.
Think about what happens to the gas (air) inside the syringe when the temperature decreases. As the gas cools it will occupy a smaller volume and thus the syringe plunger will move DOWN the barrel.
It works kinda like a syringe. Make sure the plunger is all the way down then submerse the other end in a cup of water then pull up on the plunger. You're now ready to squirt people
Yes. You can take a needle or safety pin and insert it into one of the corners of the fentanyl patch. Then, move the needle or safety pin, left & right, to make a small slit in the patch. Remove the needle and then take a credit card or some other type of hard, firm card and slide the card across the patch, to move the gel inside the patch, towards the slit that you made with the needle. Push the gel out of the slit. Then, take a syringe that is prefilled with water, about 30-40 cc's of water and carefully remove the plunger, after shaking the water down towards the needle. Then, take the gel and carefully apply it onto the opening of the syringe. Then, dip your index finger into water, until the water is on the verge of dripping off of your finger. Put your wet finger over the opening of the syringe and over the gel. (the wet finger will prevent the gel from sticking to your finger and mix with the water in the syringe) Then, shake the syringe upside down until the gel mixes with the water. Then, put the plunger back into the syringe and push the water filled with gel, up towards the needle end, careful not to push too far up, as the water mixed gel, will come out of the needle! Then, there you go!
density is mass divided by volume. It is basically how much material is packed into an amount of space. If you take a syringe full of air and seal it off, then push the plunger down, the material inside compresses, or becomes more dense.
a toilet plunger a todlers face or a cucumber
inserting it into the toilet and pushing down about 2 to 3 times
Push the plunger down and pull the snap ring.
Although I highly recommend you to stay clear from any form of injecting, intravenously or otherwise, since the process of preparing a shot and injecting it is already very addictive in itself, and once you've injected it's very hard to use other drugs without doing it by injecting. However, for the sake of harm reduction I'll answer your question the best I can. When injecting intravenously, always insert the needle towards your heart, so you don't inject against the bloodflow. So when you inject in the crook of your arm, point the needle towards your shoulder instead of your hand. It's also very important to always make shure you're actually in the vein before you push down the plunger of the syringe, to prevent missing your shot and possibly causing an abscess. When you think the needle is in a vein, slightly pull the plunger, if you're in a vein a cloud of blood will enter the syringe and you'll know you're in a vein. If you pull on the plunger but no blood enters the syringe, pull your syringe/needle out, remove the used needle from the syringe and safely dispose of it by putting the cap back on it and place a new unused needle on the syringe to repeat the injection process 1 cm or half an inch further up your arm. But like I said, please stay away from the needle or you'll regret it for the rest of your life and whatever you do, stay safe.