Tory Donor Lord Bamford Funds The Reform...
News1 min ago
It was Tescos butternut squash. Yummeee
You're supposed to heat it in a bowl, but I microwaved it in the plastic tub it came in, since there was only half of it left. It got really hot!
I couldn't be bothered mixing it with a spoon, so I just swirled it around in my hand. The whole thing started collapsing, like a vacuum pump had been attached. What's that all about? I thought the air would get hot inside and expand?
No best answer has yet been selected by Begram. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Begram, What rojash says still applies. You placed the lid on when it was very hot and steamy. The lid prevented any more air from entering and as the air within cooled, contracted and water condensed, it created the reduced pressure that caused the effect you saw.
I remember an experiment at school where a small volume of water was placed in the bottom of a one gallon metal can and heated to boiling over a bunsen burner. Once the steam had driven most of the air out, the flame was removed and a screw cap was tightened on the top. As it cooled, air pressure crushed the can to a distorted, flattened wreck. That is the effect you noticed with your soup.
sorry, rojash, but I don't think that's it. The container is half full of air, waterladen maybe, but half full of air. The container does not suck in at all, until the swirling begins. Either the air pressure lowers in the container, or the movement deforms the plastic such that it distorts and collapses the container.
Hi Rojash, thanks for the petty insult.
You happen to be wrong.
Sorry begram, but you just don't want to know the mundane truth LEAVE IT OUT. - you want some exciting mystery. LEAVE IT OUT
The reason you got a different experieince with the water is simply that you heated it to a higher temp. WRONG, THE SOUP WOULD BE AT A HIGHER TEMP THAN THE WATER. EVEN SO, WHAT DIFFERENCE WOULD IT MAKE????????
When you agitated it it boiled. REPEAT THIS TO YOURSELF AGAIN SLOWLY. 'WHEN I AGITATED IT IT BOILED. WRONG.
If you had waited a little 'til it was the same temp as the soup, the container would have collapsed in exactly the same way.
WRONG.
Try this out and actually think about the science, before you come back with another guess as to what is happening. Not nice to be wrong, especially when you're giving it the big 'I'm write, you refuse to accept my infallible majesty.'
My life would be so much better if I would only believe everything that passed Rojash's lips.
Erm, sorry to throw a spanner in the works and I am by no means a technical person but, if the answer is that the polyethylene shrinks when it is heated, why didn't it do the same when you tried the experiment with water, or are you saying that with the soup the sides caved in and the lid was sucked down, but that with the water, the sides still caved in but the lid was blown off?
*slopes off into corner to await an ear-bashing.....*