Given a bit of time yes it does.
Remember that the CO2 was evolved in the beer, so at the start the gauge pressure would have been zero, as the yeast made CO2, some of it would stay in solution some gone into the ullage, after a bit of time it would all come into equilibrium.
The amount of pressure in the head space is directly related to the amount dissolved in the beer at any given temperature and the equation is here
In fact by knowing the temperature (say 18oC in the last picture) and the pressure (just over 1 bar) and y playing with the equation or looking at the carbonation table we can tell that the dissolved CO2 is 3.7g/L, pretty much mid range for a British Pale Ale.
I would be a bit surprised if most home brewers using the brewing yeast (rather than an aggressive bottling yeast) and hopefully a lot less of it than in this experiment would find their beer coming into condition in three days, other than that a well thought out and executed experiment.
Mark
Remember that the CO2 was evolved in the beer, so at the start the gauge pressure would have been zero, as the yeast made CO2, some of it would stay in solution some gone into the ullage, after a bit of time it would all come into equilibrium.
The amount of pressure in the head space is directly related to the amount dissolved in the beer at any given temperature and the equation is here
In fact by knowing the temperature (say 18oC in the last picture) and the pressure (just over 1 bar) and y playing with the equation or looking at the carbonation table we can tell that the dissolved CO2 is 3.7g/L, pretty much mid range for a British Pale Ale.
I would be a bit surprised if most home brewers using the brewing yeast (rather than an aggressive bottling yeast) and hopefully a lot less of it than in this experiment would find their beer coming into condition in three days, other than that a well thought out and executed experiment.
Mark