Got a question here: You said that it's the atmosphere that is "doing the work" when we drink with a straw from a juicebox. So hypothetically, if I were on lets say Mars, wouldn't that still work since there barely is any atmosphere there and if not then how?
@TheSteady0 It would be harder to drink from a juice box on Mars since there would be less pressure from the Martian atmosphere (unless you were in a space suit or a dome, of course...). If you were in a vacuum, the juice -might- flow out of the box but it would be a tiny trickle... you'd want to squeeze it with your hand. Of course, if you were in a vacuum, you have other things to worry about...
Does this mean there is less air pressure in our home because in the home theres not miles of air pressure above our head theres only enough to fill to the ceiling?
@n0usernameforme No. If you closed the windows and sealed off your house from the outside, and then only let a little air in, then there would be less pressure on you. But since the outside air is "squished" into your house it still counts as having miles of air over your head.
Thanks for the incredible demonstrations! My son is doing homeschool and this will definitely help! (I hope he waits until he's with his father to do the last one though! LOL)
As mrkjclu says, pressure does decrease as you go higher. However, you might be thinking the pressure in your ears "increases". What happens there is that the pressure in your ears stays the same, so it begins to push out against the (now) less pressure outside your ears, so you feel "pressure" in your ears when you go up in altitude.
good demonstrations, but you speak way too fast.. i already understand this stuff, but for people who are trying to learn, they might be confused about what you are trying to say..just letting you know
nize 1. u r exelent.
rshngmz12 5 months ago
Got a question here: You said that it's the atmosphere that is "doing the work" when we drink with a straw from a juicebox. So hypothetically, if I were on lets say Mars, wouldn't that still work since there barely is any atmosphere there and if not then how?
TheSteady0 7 months ago
@TheSteady0 It would be harder to drink from a juice box on Mars since there would be less pressure from the Martian atmosphere (unless you were in a space suit or a dome, of course...). If you were in a vacuum, the juice -might- flow out of the box but it would be a tiny trickle... you'd want to squeeze it with your hand. Of course, if you were in a vacuum, you have other things to worry about...
sciencetheater 7 months ago
Does this mean there is less air pressure in our home because in the home theres not miles of air pressure above our head theres only enough to fill to the ceiling?
n0usernameforme 10 months ago
@n0usernameforme No. If you closed the windows and sealed off your house from the outside, and then only let a little air in, then there would be less pressure on you. But since the outside air is "squished" into your house it still counts as having miles of air over your head.
sciencetheater 10 months ago
@sciencetheater Oh thanks for explaining i get it! when air is squished from above pressure tht air gets pressed into the house :)
n0usernameforme 10 months ago
Thanks for the incredible demonstrations! My son is doing homeschool and this will definitely help! (I hope he waits until he's with his father to do the last one though! LOL)
mbshus 11 months ago
nice juggling
Olliedog317 1 year ago
lol. haha
deneve3 1 year ago
hahah funny
levon 1 year ago
Nice video.
A1n3dr5e1234567890 1 year ago
lol, "Not to scale."
obviously
TheGuyInUrCloset 2 years ago
pressure doesnt go up as you increase altitude...it decreases. As you increase in altitude there is less air above "pushing" down, so less pressure.
mrkjclu 2 years ago
question) how come as you go up pressure increases yet you've got less and less pushing you down from above?
sekky123 2 years ago
Hmm, I typed a reply but it's not here...
As mrkjclu says, pressure does decrease as you go higher. However, you might be thinking the pressure in your ears "increases". What happens there is that the pressure in your ears stays the same, so it begins to push out against the (now) less pressure outside your ears, so you feel "pressure" in your ears when you go up in altitude.
sciencetheater 2 years ago
you are cool :D
atmosphirplayer 2 years ago
thnx
tyben11 1 year ago
you know, okay
atmosphirplayer 2 years ago
good demonstrations, but you speak way too fast.. i already understand this stuff, but for people who are trying to learn, they might be confused about what you are trying to say..just letting you know
hershorn 2 years ago
That fountain thing is somewhat amusing.
sandcastle136 3 years ago
You look like chandler from friends... Good video too!
gamerfreak124 3 years ago
great video 5 stars
anpecota 3 years ago