Earwig wrote:As water cools it takes up less space - it shrinks. A litre of water has it's maximum density (takes up the least space) at 4 degrees, than starts to expand again. The water must have cooled enough to shrink and suck the bottle inwards.
Hallu wrote:Earwig wrote:As water cools it takes up less space - it shrinks. A litre of water has it's maximum density (takes up the least space) at 4 degrees, than starts to expand again. The water must have cooled enough to shrink and suck the bottle inwards.
The volume difference from 20° to 4° is only a fraction of a per cent, this is not the explaination.
As for what slparker says : "I went from a place of high ambient pressure at 200m ASA to a place of lower ambient air pressure at 1700m ASA - the bottle, if anything, should have been as tight as a drum." It's wrong as well. Less pressure on the outside yes, but inside the bottle it hasn't changed, it's a container. So it's more likely there was a leak, and the pressure wanted to equalize by making the air escape, hence collapsing the bottle.
neilmny wrote:Another thought .......the bottle stretched in the sun, some heat, UV.
A temperature change of 37.8C (310.9K) will alter the volume of air by 22%
Travis22 wrote:Charles's Law.
When you stopped and parked the car and left it up there the car naturally cooled down along with everything in it. The air in the bottle cooled down faster then the air outside of the bottle, so the air inside the bottle is at a lower pressure to the air outside of the bottle, thus it caves in a bit.
I see the same thing all of the time in my wifes car, she always drinks 600ml bottled water and bottles left overnight in the car partially drunk do the same thing.
Travis.
Moondog55 wrote:I think it's a pumping effect
Because of the way the screw top fits air can escape more easily than it can get in, so if it was warm in the car and the air inside the bottle warmed up it can get out but if the pressure on the outside becomes higher then that pressure pushing down on the top makes the seal more effective and air can't get back in as easily.
A few cycles like that and I see no problem with what you describe happening
But I could be wrong
Earwig wrote:I think this needs further research. We should all partially fill a water bottle and go skiing for the day.
slparker wrote:Travis22 wrote:Charles's Law.
When you stopped and parked the car and left it up there the car naturally cooled down along with everything in it. The air in the bottle cooled down faster then the air outside of the bottle, so the air inside the bottle is at a lower pressure to the air outside of the bottle, thus it caves in a bit.
I see the same thing all of the time in my wifes car, she always drinks 600ml bottled water and bottles left overnight in the car partially drunk do the same thing.
Travis.
I don't think that it is possible for the air in the bottle to cool down faster than the air around it - second law of thermodynamics and all that. I accept that when the water, and the air surrounding it, cooled down then the air pressure inside the vessel drops but that drop would have to be sufficient to overcome the relative net gain in pressure (trapped at 200m ASA) above that of ambient pressure (@1700m ASA).
It wasn't that cold in the car....
Chezza wrote:
I'm with you, I would have expected the air pressure in the bottle to be slightly higher than its surrounds at altitude.
Do you happen to have a datalogger lying around?
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