Chemistry, asked by karunakarkv29021, 1 year ago

What is the pressure inside a soap bubble when air is blown into it?

Answers

Answered by worldofjaved
0

Is it accurate to say that you are inquiring as to whether you include air into a current cleanser rise (by blowing into a straw through the mass of the rise, for instance) what might happen to the weight? Provided that this is true, the weight will gradually diminish. The surface strain is steady per unit length, so the power following up on an edge would be relative to the circuit, and along these lines corresponding to the breadth. The zone over which the weight responds that compel is the territory of a hover slicing through that equivalent boundary. That territory increments in extent to distance across square. So the weight will diminish in extent to distance across. The weight is more noteworthy inside little air pockets.

Answered by topanswers
8

The soap bubble has a certain amount of pressure in it.

When air is blown into the bubble, the size of the bubble increases.

The pressure inside the bubble is inversely proportional to the size of the bubble.

As the size of the bubble increases while air is blown into it, the pressure decreases proportionally.

Hence, the pressure decreases.

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