I've just noticed something and I wonder if any of you science boffins could tell me why this occurs. This is what I did:
1. Filled to about 90% an empty 50cl bottle of Evian water with tap water and screwed the lid back on .
2. Put it in the freezer so it became a solid block of ice.
3. Let the ice melt without taking the top off. I put the bottle in front of a deskfan so it acts as a cheap air conditioner.
4. The bottle has been on the desk for a couple of weeks.
I found that the bottle had compressed significantly, (as if someone had squeezed the bottle slightly and put the top back on). It was as if some of the air inside it had been lost.
How is this possible? If the seal on the lid was airtight then how did air escape to cause the decompression? If the seal was not airtight then why didn't the outside air pressure normalise the pressure inside the bottle?
I know there must be lots of more important things to worry about in life - I'm very curious how this happened.
I have an A level in physics (not sure what that translates to in US terms - probably something like 1st year degree) but that was 30 years ago. I'm familiar with the principles of Boyle's law but that doesn't explain to me what happened here.
Hmm perhaps I ought to repeat the experiment...
1. Filled to about 90% an empty 50cl bottle of Evian water with tap water and screwed the lid back on .
2. Put it in the freezer so it became a solid block of ice.
3. Let the ice melt without taking the top off. I put the bottle in front of a deskfan so it acts as a cheap air conditioner.
4. The bottle has been on the desk for a couple of weeks.
I found that the bottle had compressed significantly, (as if someone had squeezed the bottle slightly and put the top back on). It was as if some of the air inside it had been lost.
How is this possible? If the seal on the lid was airtight then how did air escape to cause the decompression? If the seal was not airtight then why didn't the outside air pressure normalise the pressure inside the bottle?
I know there must be lots of more important things to worry about in life - I'm very curious how this happened.
I have an A level in physics (not sure what that translates to in US terms - probably something like 1st year degree) but that was 30 years ago. I'm familiar with the principles of Boyle's law but that doesn't explain to me what happened here.
Hmm perhaps I ought to repeat the experiment...