Air can crush a bottle if there is more pressure exerted outside the bottle than inside the bottle; therefore the bottle may compress or "implode."
Answer 2: If you need a more detailed explanation that is easy to understandand if you want to try and do it yourself, please visit the link I added.
The air all around has a physical weight to it (approx 10lbs per square inch), however our bodies push back against this weight so we do not notice it.
If you remove the air from a bottle it will be crushed by the weight or air all around it.
The principle can be demonstrated by swimming to the bottom of a pool with and empty bottle, it willl crush as you go lower because water weighs more than are, if you turn it bottom up take off he lid and blow more air inside i goes back to normal, when you return to the surface and take the cap off it will hiss like a soda bottle as the air pressure equalises.
As the water inside the bottle cools it uses less air pressure than the cool air outside. The results are crushing.
When the air is removed from a bottle, the external air pressure becomes greater than the pressure inside the bottle, causing the bottle to collapse. This is because the air pressure on the outside is strong enough to compress the bottle's walls, leading to its collapse without the internal pressure to counterbalance it.
Basically, its from the suction from the person drinking it. actually its form the external air pressure crushing it as you remove air from the inside, if you leave a small gap as you smoke this will not happen. it is important to remember you are only removing the equalising air form the bottle, it is the inequality that makes vacuumed bottles crush and shaken soda bottles expand as they have higher air prssure than the outside, check you physics mate
This answer presumes that "empty" means the bottle has no water in it, but does have air in it.In this case the bottle would collapse (or partly collapse) if the temperature inside the bottle dropped to a lower temperature causing the air inside to shrink, or if the bottle was taken to a place of higher air pressure (such as taking the bottle from a mountain peak to the base of the mountain.The bottle would also collapse at some point of evacuation if "empty" means the bottle was evacuated of water and air. The point of collapse, in this case, would depend on the physical construction of the bottle - ie, whether it was made of steel, plastic or glass
It depends on the strength of the material the bottle is made from. If it was, for instance, a plastic soda bottle the the external air pressure would crush it. An ordinary glass bottle would be strong enough to resist the pressure.
I would love to drink that bottle of orange crush.
With a straw or gloves
When you crush a plastic bottle, you decrease the volume inside the bottle. This increase in pressure (due to the decrease in volume) is what makes the bottle crush. The atmospheric pressure outside the bottle remains constant, causing the bottle to collapse under the increased pressure inside.
When you suck air out of a bottle, you decrease the air pressure inside the bottle. The higher air pressure outside the bottle then pushes the walls of the bottle inwards, causing it to shrink. This is due to the difference in air pressure inside and outside the bottle.
Blowing air towards a bottle can either increase or decrease airflow within the bottle, depending on factors such as the pressure of the blown air and the size of the bottle opening. If the blown air has higher pressure than the air inside the bottle, it may push air into the bottle; conversely, if the blown air has lower pressure, it may draw air out of the bottle.
about 20 bucks
Moisture in the air condenses on the cold bottle. If the air is dry, there will be no dew on the bottle.