What Causes Potato Chip Bags to Burst in the Mountains?

AI Thread Summary
The bursting of potato chip bags in the mountains is primarily due to the difference in air pressure between the inside of the bags and the lower pressure outside at high altitudes. As the group ascends, the air pressure decreases, causing the higher pressure inside the bags to push against the weaker external pressure, resulting in the bags bursting. The discussion also touches on the concept of thermal equilibrium, noting that while temperatures may equalize, the density and number of air molecules differ significantly between sea level and mountain altitudes. This difference in density contributes to the pressure imbalance that leads to the bags bursting. Ultimately, the key factor is the pressure differential created by the elevation change.
touqra
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Please help me with this one:

A group of students drove from their school at sea level up into the mountains. Upon arriving at the slopes, they discovered that the bags of potato chips they had brought had all burst open. What caused this to happen?
 
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What do you think this might have involved?
 
You've probably NOT seen many physically significant quantities yet ...
mass, momentum, Force, Energy, Torque, angular momentum ...
Which do you think might be the culprit?
 
lightgrav said:
You've probably NOT seen many physically significant quantities yet ...
mass, momentum, Force, Energy, Torque, angular momentum ...
Which do you think might be the culprit?

Pengwuino said:
What do you think this might have involved?

Well, I have never experienced this before. But this is what I understand...
On high altitudes, the air is thinner, so the pressure is lower than at sea level. If the pressure is lower, the air inside my potato chip bags is higher. So, the air will come out and burst, out they go.
But then, the air in the bags should be cold since we are on the mountains. So the pressure drops in the bag...How then can it burst?

I have went up mountains before. And, instead of chips, I took with me a bottle of fizzy drink. The funny thing is that, when I open it, in the mountains, the gas never comes out. There is no fizzing sounds.

:rolleyes:
 
touqra said:
But then, the air in the bags should be cold since we are on the mountains. So the pressure drops in the bag...How then can it burst?

Let's suppose that the contents of the bag reaches thermal equilibrium with the environment. Are there any other remaining differences between the air in the bag and the air outside?
 
SpaceTiger said:
Let's suppose that the contents of the bag reaches thermal equilibrium with the environment. Are there any other remaining differences between the air in the bag and the air outside?

Well, if that is so, then, the pressure was higher in the bag than the mountains. So, which means the molecules have higher energy in the bag than the air molecules outside the bag. And, now, the molecules in the bag are stronger and will be able to push its way and the outside air molecules aren't able to fight back. So, the bag burst open.
In other words, pressure, P is inversely proportional to V.
Is that it?
 
touqra said:
Well, if that is so, then, the pressure was higher in the bag than the mountains. So, which means the molecules have higher energy in the bag than the air molecules outside the bag. And, now, the molecules in the bag are stronger and will be able to push its way and the outside air molecules aren't able to fight back. So, the bag burst open.

Actually, when it reaches thermal equilibrium the average energy per molecule will be the same inside the bag as outside. Take another look at the ideal gas law. If I draw an imaginary box in the air at the bottom of the mountain, how would the contents of that box differ from the contents of an identical imaginary box at the top of the mountain?
 
Thats interesting, as potatoe chip bags don't burst when your in an airplane, granted there not at atmospheric pressure, but they are pressurized below normal atmospheric pressure. I wonder how it would compare to the elevation of the mountain they were on.
 
SpaceTiger said:
Actually, when it reaches thermal equilibrium the average energy per molecule will be the same inside the bag as outside. Take another look at the ideal gas law. If I draw an imaginary box in the air at the bottom of the mountain, how would the contents of that box differ from the contents of an identical imaginary box at the top of the mountain?

Ah, sorry. It's the high pressure in the bag versus the lower pressure outside.
 
  • #10
touqra said:
Ah, sorry. It's the high pressure in the bag versus the lower pressure outside.

Well, yes, but now I fear we're back where we started. You were right, of course, that pressure goes as one over volume, but go back to the imaginary boxes that I drew at sea level and at the top of the mountain. The volume is the same in both cases and you've already said that the temperature is different. Is there anything else that differs between the boxes?
 
  • #11
SpaceTiger said:
Well, yes, but now I fear we're back where we started. You were right, of course, that pressure goes as one over volume, but go back to the imaginary boxes that I drew at sea level and at the top of the mountain. The volume is the same in both cases and you've already said that the temperature is different. Is there anything else that differs between the boxes?

Hmm...The number of molecules inside the sea level box is higher than the number of molecules inside the mountain box.
 
  • #12
touqra said:
Hmm...The number of molecules inside the sea level box is higher than the number of molecules inside the mountain box.

Right. This is the same as saying that the densities are different. All other things the same, a bag of molecules taken to the top of a mountain will want to expand to the same density as the air surrounding it -- this is when it's in pressure balance. Although there would also be a temperature difference at the top of the mountain, I suspect that its fractional change would be small relative to the density difference.
 

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