When you suck air from a bottle you create a partial vacuum and there is less air pressure in the bottle; but outside there is atmospheric pressure so it tends to collapse 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.
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.
A water bottle has air pressure because the air inside is compressed due to the volume of the bottle decreasing as you drink from it. When you open the bottle cap, the compressed air rushes out quickly, causing a hissing sound as it equalizes with the surrounding air pressure.
The relationship between liquid and bottle is containment. Air is to balloon.
A liter bottle can hold approximately 1 liter of air.
When water is cooled, it shrinks. If the water is in a sealed bottle, it shrinks the bottle, too, collapsing it to some degree.
the force of the air pulls on the marsh mellow causing it to expand
The air inside shrinks its space needed.
Warm air can hold more moisture (humidity) than cool air. Therefore, when the air cools off and the amount of moisture in the air is too high, some water separates out from the air. This is why dew falls on a cool summer night or we get a frost some winter evenings. The water bottle example is the same process, but smaller scale. The air cools off right next to the cold bottle, and cannot hold as much humidity. So, like dew on the ground, you get condensation ("sweat") on the outside of your water bottle.
About 1 minute...i think!
This is due to pressure. Once you take out all the air, all the air particles are taken out. Therefore, the bottle is vacuumed. The pressure of the air particles outside the bottle are stronger while they bounce against the bottle. Since there is nothing inside the bottle, it is uneven. The bottle then crunches up due to the pressure from the outside. I think that is what happens^ sorry if it isn't the answer you were looking for!
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.
bottle nose dolphins suck.
A balloon shrinks as it grows because its walls expand to accommodate the increasing amount of air inside.
The matches burn up the oxygen, removing it. This causes a vacuum, which pulls the egg in. Also the heat from the matches expand the air in the bottle. Once they have gone out, the air cools and contracts, causing a vacuum and pulling the egg in.
When you suck the air out of a bottle, it collapses because the air all around it is pressing on it from the outside. There's nothing all around the universe to press on it from the outside.
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.