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it would implode.
With less gas inside the bottle, it will weigh less. But not by very much, for the mass of the volume of air is slight. If he bottle is evacuated, then its shape will change slightly - but once again, a small amount. If the bottle is fragile, it may collapse. This would be expected for a plastic bottle, such as a soft drink bottle.
It would depend on the size, shape, and weight of the water bottle, and whether you mean a glass or plastic container. Also, if you mean a 'hot water bottle', that uses different material and holds more or less weight depending on how full it is.
A reflected light would be light reflected by a mirror, and the light would remain unchanged. A reflected light of daylight is when white light is split into 'rainbow' colours.
air doesn't have enough mass. water is needed for it's mass. a plastic drink bottle can't hold enough air, the pressure would be to high.
It depends on how much pressure (C02) has built up within the bottle and what the bottle is made out of (plastic will produce more 'fizz' than glass. They would mostly produce the same, the bottle cap just releases all pressure at once while the twist off releases air slowly which changes the pressure gradually.
no because the heat would melt the bottle :)
Glass would be healthier
No. The plastic would keep the electric charge
Well that would depend on the size of the plastic bottle. If the bottle is large use litters or "L" for short. If the bottle is small use milliliters or "ml" for short.
In the first place the water in the bottle would keep the temperature of the plastic down preventing it from burning and leaking, The same as you would do by boiling water over a flame in a paper cup, However the water in the bottle would heat up and eventually the pressure inside the bottle would burst it like a balloon.
2 trillon and 5
it would implode.
It is my understanding when doing research for phthalates in our water samples, that phthalates are released from plastic containers. We changed our containers from plastic to glass and voila! no more phthalates in our samples. It seems that a water bottle with no phthalates would have to be a glass bottle,
It would just melt the plastic and the water would pour out.
If there were no bottle caps (as we currently know them), there would be covers or plugs of some type. For example: cork or wax or plastic plugs. Someone would invent something to protect the contents of a bottle.
I would assume it's Green. When chlorophil is consumed it makes your mouth green. In a bottle it is very dark green.