Find a bottle with wide mouth .If not available breake the egg and pour in bottle.
To get an egg into a bottle without breaking it, heat the air inside the bottle by lighting a piece of paper inside. Quickly place the egg on the mouth of the bottle, allowing the hot air to escape and creating a vacuum that pulls the egg into the bottle.
If you're referring to the common science demonstration, the answer is that the heated air in the bottle expands. When it re-cools (after the egg has been placed on the neck of the bottle) it is at a much lower pressure than the surrounding atmosphere; the weight of the air above it is then sufficient to push the egg into the bottle.
The egg will not go into the bottle because the egg is larger than the bottle's opening, so it cannot fit through. Additionally, the shape of the egg makes it difficult for it to be inserted into the bottle.
When sucking an egg into a bottle, the pressure inside the bottle decreases as the egg blocks the opening. Without enough pressure to push the egg through the bottleneck, the egg remains stuck inside the bottle.
Yes, place a flame (match, candle, etc) inside the bottle, then quickly place an egg on top. As the air in the bottle burns, the pressure will drop and the egg will be sucked into the bottle.
To put an egg inside a bottle without touching it, you can create a vacuum by heating the air inside the bottle before placing the egg on top. As the air cools, it will contract, creating a lower pressure inside the bottle that will suck the egg inside.
Absolutely! This is a very common experiment. A Frappuccino bottle is the perfect size for a peeled hard boiled egg. First drop a piece of paper into the bottle. Then take a lighter a light the paper on fire. Quickly place the egg into the bottle opening. Observe what happens!
To get an egg into a bottle without breaking it, heat the air inside the bottle by lighting a piece of paper inside. Quickly place the egg on the mouth of the bottle, allowing the hot air to escape and creating a vacuum that pulls the egg into the bottle.
That's a weird question, but here goes. Light a couple of matches and put them in bottle. I assume in your case it would be a beer bottle. Quickly place the boiled egg over bottle opening. The burning of the matches will convert the oxygen in the bottle to carbon dioxide, creating a vacuum and sucking the egg into the bottle. Another way is to stick the egg in some vinegar for an hour. Vinegar will soften the egg so it can easily slide in. You could also put water in a pot and let it start to boil. After the water is heated take the water and put it into the glass bottle and quickly put the egg on the top of the bottle. That should compress the oxygen just as good as a match could. You should get the same reaction if done properly. You can also bring the egg out by putting some baking soda on the egg and pouring some vinegar in the container.Quickly turn the container upside down.
either: Put the egg in a plastic bag or hold a full water bottle over the egg
If you're referring to the common science demonstration, the answer is that the heated air in the bottle expands. When it re-cools (after the egg has been placed on the neck of the bottle) it is at a much lower pressure than the surrounding atmosphere; the weight of the air above it is then sufficient to push the egg into the bottle.
MATERIALS NEEDED: glass bottle with a long, narrow neck (an apple cider jug works well), boiled egg, matches. PROCESS: Put the empty bottle on a table, Peel the boiled egg, Light a match and drop it into the bottle. Repeat about three or four times, Quickly put the egg over the mouth of the bottle. EXPLANATION: The lit match heats the air inside the bottle. When air is heated it expands and takes up more room. As the heated air expands, some of it escapes out of the bottle. When the matches go out, the air inside the bottle cools and contracts, which takes up less room. This creates a lower pressure inside the bottle than outside the bottle. The greater pressure outside the bottle forces the egg to get sucked into the bottle.
The egg will not go into the bottle because the egg is larger than the bottle's opening, so it cannot fit through. Additionally, the shape of the egg makes it difficult for it to be inserted into the bottle.
When sucking an egg into a bottle, the pressure inside the bottle decreases as the egg blocks the opening. Without enough pressure to push the egg through the bottleneck, the egg remains stuck inside the bottle.
The old Egg In a Bottle air pressure test. You need matches, a hard-boiled egg, and a glass bottle whose mouth is a little smaller than the egg's diameter. Light one or two matches, and carefully but quickly drop them in the bottle (you want the matches to still be burning in the bottle. Then put the egg on the mouth fo the bottle. The matches burn up all the oxygen in the bottle, decreasing the air pressure. The greater air-pressure outside the bottle pushes the egg down into the bottle without anyone touching the egg.
you have to get in about the cinter of the aquariam top and tack out the egg from the bottle.
When the air cools it retracts creating a vacuum. The Vacuum then pulls the egg into the bottle. Since the vacuum acts equally across the surface of the egg, it is able to gently but quickly pull the egg through the opening without breaking it... most of the time.