Sentences with phrase «amount of air bubbles»

Anti-colic and vented bottles have an internal venting system that helps to decrease the amount of air bubbles baby may take in.
The formula and water are dispensed through a funnel that controls the amount of air bubbles that are mixed in.

Not exact matches

Use a minimal amount of flour on your surface while rolling and pushing out any large air bubbles that may have formed in the dough with your hands.
We're just taking advantage of a very small amount of emulsification, air bubble trapping and thickening properties.
They make it possible to reduce the size of the ice crystals and air bubbles in your product, ensuring it ends up with a nice creamy texture regardless of the amount of fat in the ice cream mix ingredients.
That way, you allow gas bubbles to break up, minimizing the amount of air in baby's belly.
When one of these bubble wrap — like sheets is placed against a user's skin, inflating different air pockets by different amounts at different speeds can make a gamer feel like she's been grabbed around the wrist or patted on the back.
Drought actually puts the trees» water transport systems under a huge amount of tension, he says, causing air bubbles to leak in, which damages or blocks those pipes.
Sionix, an Anaheim, Calif. — based corporation, which manufactures a treatment system that uses microscopic air bubbles to clean water, is testing whether its technology can also reduce levels of metal, namely iron and manganese (both toxic to the body in large amounts) in Santiago Creek near Villa Park Dam in Orange County, Calif..
As it moves, the water captures different amounts of air in the bubbles.
I'm aware that there is probably air in the system somewhere, but I've bled through a significant amount of fluid with no bubbles coming out.
To get around this problem, Thomas Blunier and colleagues nearly ten years ago pioneered an ingenious method to synchronise the ice cores of Greenland and Antarctica by analysing changes in the amount of methane in air bubbles in the ice.
We know from bubbles of air trapped in ice cores that before the industrial revolution, the amount of CO2 in the air was approximately 280 parts per million (ppm).
From the press release: «During field expeditions, the research team used a variety of techniques — including sonar and visual images of methane bubbles in the water, air and water sampling, seafloor drilling and temperature readings — to determine the conditions of the water and permafrost, as well as the amount of methane being released.»
It is not that I am failing to think logically, it is when people start talking about he compression of ice relative to air bubbles relative to the porosity of said ice and the amount of time it takes for that ice to seal when looking at the time scale of CO2 found in ice samples, I am pretty well lost.
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