haha cool, we were never allowed to do anything like that in high school, adn i have not taken teh chemistry lab course in college yet, but they show us some nice demonstrations.
Last week they showed us the creation of a partial vacuum in an oil drum, one of those big ones. they put water in it, heated it so that the inside was warm (comparatively to room tempature). Then the drum was sealed off, and he began to spray it with water to illustrate one of the ideas of gas laws in chemistry. He sprayed water on the outside of it, and then as the inside cooled down at a rapid rate, the atmospheric pressure remained constant while the inside pressure of the drum (pressure increases because gas takes up more room than liquid, newton's 3rd law, for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction...so the inside was pushing out and the atmospheric pressure was counteracting that)...the atmostpheric pressure remained heavily pushing against the drum while teh inside cooled down which resulted in teh gas condensing into a liquid as it cooled down. As it cooled, the pressure loss inside was rapid and it was lost a consequence of the change of state...but the atmosphere pressure was still pushing on it, so then what happened was that the drum collapsed very very quickly, i could not see it happen...like in an instant. It was sweet, you can do that same experiment with a pop can filled with a little water, heat it up, and place it upside down in water (so as to seal off the can), it will collapse as well.
it was sweet to see it happen on such a grand scale, unneeded, but cool. Sorry for such a long explanation with hard to follow sentences hah.
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