Environmental Sciences, asked by Robartson, 5 days ago

blow once on your palm. what do you feel and why?​

Answers

Answered by mohitrajputmohit75
3

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Answered by SmilekillerTaeTae
1

Explanation:

When you blow harder, more surrounding air gets mixed in with the stream of air from your mouth.

The faster air moves, the lower pressure it has (Bernoulli's principle). So when you blow faster, your stream of air is lower pressure than the surrounding air. Thus the surrounding air fills in the stream. The surrounding air is obviously cooler than the air in your lungs. To test this - blow fast, but put your finger right on your lip - notice it's still quite warm because other air hasn't had a chance to mix in yet.

To visual why this happens, imagine the stream of air coming from your mouth as a freeway with all redcars on it. Every on ramp to this freeway has a long line of blue cars eager to get on. If traffic is moving slow, and the red cars (air from lungs) are very close together, not a lot of blue cars (surrounding air) can get on. But if the traffic is sparse and the flow quick, you'd see more of a mix of red and blue cars.

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