Juice boxes have straws attached to make it easier and more comfortable to drink from the container. Juice boxes were first produced as one of the first "on the go" containers. The small size made it ideal to use in packed lunches, such as for school children who brought a "bag lunch" or carried a lunch box from home to school.
The body part that best helps to suck up juice from a drinking straw is the tongue. When a person sucks liquid through a straw, the jaw muscles and tongue work in conjunction to bring the liquid up.
As you have more than likely taken the juice from the fridge, when you inserted the straw you have created a way the juice can escape. (usually by you sucking on the straw) But as the juice heats up, it also expands slightly causing pressure to build up in the juice container and forcing it to go up the straw to find a way out.
Yes. Drinking with a straw will only be easier, as there is less gravity to hold down the juice.
Yes, you can drink a juice box without the straw. You can simply open the box and sip directly from the spout or pour the juice into a cup. However, using the straw can make it easier to drink, especially for younger children.
Drinking juice through a straw on the Moon would be quite different from on Earth due to the Moon's low gravity. While the straw could still function, the juice wouldn't flow naturally as it does on Earth. Instead, you would need to create suction to pull the liquid into the straw, and the lack of gravity would make it harder to control the liquid, which could float away. So, while it's technically possible, it would be a challenging experience!
Stick it in and suck it. Even better insrtuctions Get it out of the fridge take the straw off the back unwrap the straw poke a hole in the Box Then u put the straw in the box then drink it Enjoy
milk and soda and grape juice
Go to the hospital
A juice box straw is. When you suck in you create an area of low pressure in the straw. The fluid inside the juice box rushes into the straw and up into your mouth. This is one of the most basic one though
The capillary action allows water to climb up sides of a straw due to adhesive forces.
When a straw meets water, the water molecules are attracted to the straw due to the force of surface tension. This attraction pulls the water up the sides of the straw, causing it to bend as it follows the shape of the straw.
Sipping Cider Through a Straw was created in 1919.