Trial 2 - Air Pressure in a Juice Box
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Measure the air pressure in the room.
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Without inhaling or exhaling with
the straw, use your experimental setup to
measure the air pressure inside the juice box.
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Add your measurements to the drawing below.
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Is the air pressure in and outside
the juice box the same?
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Does it matter where outside the
juice box you measure the air pressure?
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Measure the air pressure in the
juice box as you suck air out of the juice
box. Show your results in the form of a
line graph. Refer to Technical Hints to record a
series of measurements.
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Label the graph when you started to
inhale and when you stopped inhaling. Refer
to Technical Hints to
label a line graph.
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When the pressure inside the juice
box is at its lowest point, what does the
box look like? Make a drawing showing the
box, and label the inside air pressure and
the outside air pressure.
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What happens to the air pressure in
the juice box when you stop inhaling?
| It returns to the
same as the outside air pressure. |
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Try exhaling into the straw. How
does this affect the shape of the juice box?
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What happens to the air pressure in
the juice box when you stop exhaling?
| It returns to the
same as the outside air pressure. |
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On any given surface, air pressure
exerts a force. This force acts like a
push. Look at the cases below. If the wall
is not sturdy, which way would you expect it
to go?
Case 1
Case 2
Case 3
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Looking at the cases above, which
case most closely matches the data you
gathered in Trial 2 when you were sucking
air out of the juice box?
Explain.
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Which case most closely resembles
when you were neither sucking on nor blowing
into the straw -- when you were just
measuring the inside and outside air pressure?
Explain.
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