Food & Drink1 min ago
Physics Help Please
If you freefall jumped out of an aeroplane at 20,000 feet holding upright an open can of beer, would the beer stay in the can or stream out?
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At GCSE sort of level the beer stays in the can, the skydiver and the can and the beer all falls at the same rate so it stays in there.
In reality there is the atmosphere to consider, as the can falls through the air it forms a higher pressure at it's base and a low pressure at its top which will have the effect of sucking the beer out of the can
So It depends
At GCSE sort of level the beer stays in the can, the skydiver and the can and the beer all falls at the same rate so it stays in there.
In reality there is the atmosphere to consider, as the can falls through the air it forms a higher pressure at it's base and a low pressure at its top which will have the effect of sucking the beer out of the can
So It depends
even at O level, I thik para 1 of J t k's post is valid
the law of physics is Newton's 3 rd law -
man-parachute-beer - no internal forces - or all internal forces cancel so they act a fixed body
and para 2 - if Phigh is 0.25 x P sea level then V is 4V - of a bubble in the beer - and that answers jomiflls point of what replaces it ?
Answer: the expanded gas in the bubble
Oh, that is boyle's law
Not a bad question in terms of getting people to think about the basic laws of phys.
the law of physics is Newton's 3 rd law -
man-parachute-beer - no internal forces - or all internal forces cancel so they act a fixed body
and para 2 - if Phigh is 0.25 x P sea level then V is 4V - of a bubble in the beer - and that answers jomiflls point of what replaces it ?
Answer: the expanded gas in the bubble
Oh, that is boyle's law
Not a bad question in terms of getting people to think about the basic laws of phys.
How about drinking out of one of Steve.5's vessels then?
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