Can Air Be Compressed Without a Container?

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    Air Compressible
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Air can be considered incompressible below a speed of 0.4 Mach, as indicated by Bernoulli's theorem. While compressing air in a container is straightforward, achieving compression in free air is more complex and depends on specific conditions. At speeds between Mach 0.3 and 0.4, there is approximately 5% compression observed in typical scenarios. Below these speeds, the degree of compression is minimal enough that simplified models often disregard it. Understanding these principles is essential for accurately modeling air behavior in various applications.
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I have read in different theorem's (Bernoulli's for example), that free air is considered incompressible below a speed of 0.4 Mach.
If I were to place air in a jug and reuce the amount of space it occupies, then I am compressing it, but is this possible under certain conditions in free air?
 
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That's a generalization about how air reacts to solid objects moving through the air. Somewhere between mach .3 and mach .4, there's about 5% compression in most common situations. It's less at lower speeds, enough that simplified mathematical models can ignore it.
 
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