What are causing the cup to fly out?

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The discussion centers on understanding the forces at play when one cup flies out from another during an experiment involving blowing air. The air blown between the cups creates a pressure difference, which pushes the inner cup upward. Despite attempts to verify this by cutting holes in the outer cup, the inner cup continues to pop up, indicating that air pressure is still effectively maintained. The experiment suggests that air pressure dynamics are crucial in this phenomenon. Overall, the interaction of air pressure and airflow is key to explaining the behavior of the cups.
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Hello. I need some help of understanding what forces are causing one of the cups to fly out of the other one when you blow at it. This video describes the experiment.
 
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Mo,
It looks as if the individual is blowing right between a cup and the one just above it.
When you blow, what are you doing to the air?
As a hint, if the air is blown between the top cup and the one underneath, it must be the air creating some kind of force to push the cup up and out.
Can you maybe try to give a some kind of explanation on your own now.

PS. You might understand it better by thinking about it some more, than just reading an explanation.
 
I have been doing quite a lot of tests on my own now and has sort of came to the conclusion that air pressure is forming at the bottom of the outher cup and pushes the inner one up. I tried verfiying this by cutting out of the bottom of the outer cup, thinking that this would cause the air to escape underneath. Unfortunately this did not happen to be the case.
 
I would have come to the the same conclusion.

By cutting out the bottom of the outer cup, did not the air flow out the bottom or was it not able to.
Tried it myself with poking holes in the bottom of paper cups, and the top cup still wants to pop up.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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