Sentences with phrase «little gas bubbles»

When you feed your baby little gas bubbles tend to build up in those tiny tummies of theirs and so when you neglect to burp them afterwards they could become very uncomfortable or even end up spitting up everything that they had just eaten.

Not exact matches

The Little Remedies Gas Drops are perfect, which is simethicone and that's a medicine that helps break down the gas bubbles in your baby's tumGas Drops are perfect, which is simethicone and that's a medicine that helps break down the gas bubbles in your baby's tumgas bubbles in your baby's tummy.
They also like massage at this time, and I would go and I would get my Little Remedies Gas Drops, which remember, and try using those to break down the gas bubblGas Drops, which remember, and try using those to break down the gas bubblgas bubbles.
As babies, we NEED to be burped after each feeding to help little tummies avoid those dreaded gas bubbles.
That's where you come in and can help them release the gas bubble caught in their gastrointestinal system — leading not only to more comfort for their little bellies but also preventing more serious conditions.
Often these kinds of motions break up bubbles and give gas that little extra push it needs to work its way out.
Doing these things can help to break up bubbles and give gas a little push towards an exit.
This is wonderful for formula feeding because often formula forms little bubbles when shaken up to mix; these bubbles, when ingested, can cause gas and fussiness, however, the Comotomo air vents are specifically designed to prevent this from happening.
These two processes generally overwhelm a third, little - known process, called the piston effect: When the liquid surrounding a bubble is heated, it expands, which compresses the bubble and warms the gas.
Because this implosive collapse is dominated by the inertia of the liquid surrounding the bubble, and there is little stiffness supplied by the condensing vapor (only the small amount of residual gas contained within the bubble), the energy density can become much larger than that originally present in the sound field itself.
They saw that the second harmonic was a little delayed by the gas bubbles.
In both cases, methane gas bubbles to the surface with little or no oxidation, entering the atmosphere as CH4 — a powerful greenhouse gas which increases local, then Arctic atmospheric and ocean temperature, resulting in progressively deeper and larger deposits of clathrate melting.
To start with «ice cores», where the ice is produced from the compression of SNOW, there is little to nil VALID reasoning to assume that after 650000 years the gas «bubbles» found can actually represent the original composition of the «atmosphere» at any particular time, or at all.
Hi Peter, Ok, this is the kind of statement your comments are full of that I was talking about in our email exchange: «To start with «ice cores», where the ice is produced from the compression of SNOW, there is little to nil VALID reasoning to assume that after 650000 years the gas «bubbles» found can actually represent the original composition of the «atmosphere» at any particular time, or at all.»
One liter of methane clathrate solid would therefore contain, on average, 168 liters of methane gas (at STP)» so the formation of clathrates near the wellhead would buoyantly transport the gas to near surface layers above the clathrate stability zone, where it would break down into bubbles and dissolve; I think that turbulence in the rising column would disperse the clathrate and bubbles widely enough that little if any would make it directly to the surface.
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