Quizzes & Puzzles36 mins ago
ok, roomy vacum collap-sy-ness?
sorry. ignor the title, my Q is this:
You know those vacu-sack things, that you put clothes etc. in and suck air out of? well you suck air out of them and they collapse.
If you created a similar vacum in a room, would the walls collapse in?
thats not so clear is it? sorry x
You know those vacu-sack things, that you put clothes etc. in and suck air out of? well you suck air out of them and they collapse.
If you created a similar vacum in a room, would the walls collapse in?
thats not so clear is it? sorry x
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by clairey-s. 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.This is a picture of a vacuum chamber
http://www.abilityengineering.com/IMAGES/vacuu m/UHV-VACUUM-CHAMBER.jpg
Is your average room built like this?
Why is this?
Answers on a postcard......
http://www.abilityengineering.com/IMAGES/vacuu m/UHV-VACUUM-CHAMBER.jpg
Is your average room built like this?
Why is this?
Answers on a postcard......
I, too, clairey-s meant no sarcasm... however, since I didn't word my answer with sufficient clarity (pun only slightly intended) I'll concede, within the parameters of the now defined discussion, that if a vaccum achieved by a means other than the vacuum cleaner used to collapse the storage bags, then the design limits of most structures could easily be exceeded. However, the question referenced a "similar vacuum".. the device used to suck the air out of the vacuum storage bag is, of course, the standard vacuum cleaner, which was the basis for my guess. Again, no sarcasm intended, but here's a picture of an efficient vacuum chamber as well... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Edison_bulb .jpg ... I don't know for sure, but looks to me like it's glass, no?
. . . well, that narrows it down. "Everyone else" must be ME, henceforth and 4-ever more to be known as mibn2sarcastic <�?
Nevertheless, as bizarre as it may seem, a typical househood vacuum cleaner can produce a sealed pressure differential of 2-3 psi. For a fairly modest sized (3x4 metre) room, that translates into 10-20 tonnes of inward force on each wall plus up to an addition 25 tonnes of downward force overhead, comparable to a 2-metre deep swimming pool on your roof . . . really!
Would the walls in a room collapse from such a vacuum? All I can say for sure is, "I'm out of here!" ~ ~ ~ <o"o>
Nevertheless, as bizarre as it may seem, a typical househood vacuum cleaner can produce a sealed pressure differential of 2-3 psi. For a fairly modest sized (3x4 metre) room, that translates into 10-20 tonnes of inward force on each wall plus up to an addition 25 tonnes of downward force overhead, comparable to a 2-metre deep swimming pool on your roof . . . really!
Would the walls in a room collapse from such a vacuum? All I can say for sure is, "I'm out of here!" ~ ~ ~ <o"o>
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