Chianti Classico Raffino had the straw around the flask
this is how to make the easyest homemade thermometer projectwhat you need: bowl, water, food dye, bottle of drink like coca-cola bottle,play-doh and a straw.building step:step 1: add water into the bowlstep 2: add dye in the bowl of waterstep 3: put some play-doh on the bottle hole and make sure that you put your play-doh around the straw and around the bottle holestep 4: make sure that there is no air and water in the bottle and that the straw is not blockedstep 5: put your bottle part with the water part, but make sure that you don't put water in the bottle because the water will get upper when coldstep 6: put some ice on top of the bottle and wash your red liquid climb up with the ice on top of it.important note: this project do not work like a normal thermometer because normal thermometer have liquid going up when hot and this project go up when cold, please do not frost the dyed water, only frost the top of the project.i made this project at school and though to tell it to all of youWikiAnswers name: Gentlyjack12rd important note: if you edit my page please say what you want to say and put your WikiAnswers name.THANK YOUif you know how to make a thermometer, say your answer with responsibility and will agreed your answers
These are experiments where an egg is sucked into a bottle, when -- the bottle is heated, then allowed to cool -- a burning piece of paper is placed inside These have been used to demonstrate the effects of -- temperature and pressure -- the chemical binding of oxygen by oxidation ...and have been around since the 19th century (anytime since the invention of the glass milk bottle around 1877).
This question points up some key misconceptions about what a vacuum is.So you put a straw in your cup of water. If you look down the straw or could look through it, you would see that the level of water inside and outside the straw are exactly the same. This is because the atmosphere is pushing down on the water inside the straw, and it is pushing down equally hard on the water outside the straw. So the pressures are equal.When you suck on the straw, you are decreasing the pressure in your mouth and lowering the pressure of the air in the top of the straw. When that happens, the force of the atmosphere pushing on the water in the glass is higher than the force of gas inside the straw. The atmosphere forces the liquid up the straw into your mouth. So, in essence, you ARE NOT sucking the liquid into your mouth, the atmosphere is pushing it there.This is easily proved by an experiment. Try drinking water from a straw that is more than 20 meters tall. It won't work. At around 20 meters, the massive column of water inside the straw would be pulled down by gravity, with a force greater than the upward force caused by the atmosphere. Even if you completely evacuate the straw with a high-powered pump the water won't make it up the straw. This is why you can't pump water out of a well that is more than 20 meters deep in the ground. Anything deeper than that and you need to use a compressor to pump air at high pressure down into the well, to force the water out (essentially make the upward pressure higher than the atmosphere alone provides), or revert to the tried and true method using buckets.Of course, a similar principle applies with underground or artesian wells. The water there is already under greater pressure and will flow to the surface if given a path.
The power of suction is what is demonstrated by water moving up a straw. When you suck through a straw, the water has nowhere to go but up.
It may harken back to the day when the Israelistes were slaves for the Pharoh and he increased their quota of bricks to make and withheld the important component of straw. I imagine the slaves had to procure the necessary straw through a straw purchase, since they could not purchase the straw for making the bricks. That is my guess until a better one comes along.
"Wicker basket bottle of Chianti" in English is fiasco di Chianti in Italian.
Fiasco
Its Giannotti chianti, and not much about $20
Are you looking for a type of wine that comes in such bottle?--chianti, perhaps?
false
True
When you put a straw in a water bottle I think the straw stinks and then when you let go of breathing in the water bottle I think it increases and then after that I think when you boil water and then you put the straw in the bottle and put the boiling hot water in the bottle and then I think the straw is like cutting it thanks for reading this but I think it's the wrong answer sorry if it is
Drinking from a straw is the same as an egg going into a glass bottle, because air pressure in both cases is used to move something. In the straw, you reduce the air pressure in the straw, so the air pressure around the drink pushes it up into the straw and into your mouth. In the egg, you reduce the air pressure in the bottle, and air pressure around the egg pushes it down into the bottle.
No. I would definitely kill them first. And then get a nice bottle of Chianti.
Yes you can if all conditions were perfect. By that I mean that the bottle would have to be a near perfect vacuum by sucking out the air from the bottle with the straw. The vacated air from the bottle would be replaced by the baloon stretching to fill the space left by the air. You would have no need to blow into the baloon as the vacuum would do the work for you.
4inch covers wine to champagne
When the water in the bottle is cooled, it contracts and creates a lower pressure inside the bottle. The higher atmospheric pressure outside the bottle pushes the water up through the straw to equalize the pressure, causing the water level in the straw to rise.