The bottle will collapse when the bottle has heated air
it will bust
To stop water vapour escaping
Because it's sealed in an airless bottle. Glues need air to dry .
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== == Typically the liquid will prevent holes from forming. You can boil water in a paper cup. However, the heat will eventually evaporate all the liquid and the glass or can can melt and deform. Heat can also deform a plastic bottle and release the contents. If the can or bottle is sealed and exposed to high heat it can explode and send a shower of hot broken glass or metal for a long distance, it is very dangerous and should never be done with any sealed container.
If heated to and above boiling point the pressure in the bottle would begin to rise. Depending on how much it is heated it might either stay like that, or the increased pressure might cause the bottle to burst.
it will bust
John Need-ham heated broth in sealed flasks in 1745
Assuming the can can be sealed. When the can is heated the air inside it expands. If the can is then sealed and allowed to cool the air inside contracts which causes the pressure inside to drop. Because the outside air pressure is now greater it crushes the can.
Not necessarily. You have to have a space of air in the bottle. The expansion/contraction happens because the water is heating/cooling the air. Liquids are usually considered incompressible and hence will not change their volume when heated or cooled (unless it evaporates or melts!). Assuming that you have an air space: If you have cold water in a sealed bottle that you heat up, it will expand. If you put hot water in a bottle and seal it, it will contract as it cools. If the bottle is not sealed, there will be no volume change.
The sealed jar is what is known as 'commercially sterile' because it has been heated and hermetically sealed to keep out microorganisms. When you open it, you have broken the seal and have allowed organisms to enter.
Nothing important at room temperature and if the bottle is sealed.
The grass would presumably catch on fire, however, if the bottle was sealed, the fire would eventually burn out due to the lack of oxygen required to continue combustion.
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Actually, an empty sealed bottle should expand slightly as altitude increases. At the altitude where the bottle is sealed, the air pressure outside the bottle is equal to the air pressure inside the bottle. When the bottle is transported to a higher altitude, the air pressure inside the bottle is greater than the air pressure outside the bottle (In other words: There are more air molecules per unit volume inside the bottle than outside). The increased air pressure inside the bottle relative to the outside pressure causes the bottle to expand slightly. An empty bottle would not collapse as altitude increases.
Practically forever.