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Do bubbles escape when you squeeze a sponge under water air
Answer: Made of trapped air bubbles
Many air bubbles would be trapped under it .
Pumice has tiny air pockets to help it float in water.
Igneous rocks form when lava or magma cools.But when cooling there are air bubbles that are trapped in the lava.Prime examples of this event are found in pumice and scoria
because the bubbles are air the air can't fuse with hydrogen to become water because there is no excess hydrogen so it goes to the air as bubbles
If you don't lay your slide cover correctly on the slide that has the specimen, you can have air bubbles.
Do bubbles escape when you squeeze a sponge under water air
The water falls faster and pushed the water down allowing air in before the water balances out and the trapped air form air bubbles
Answer: Made of trapped air bubbles
Glassy volcanic fragments with many trapped air bubbles.
There are bubbles of air trapped in the ice from the snow which show the % gases from the past
Glassy volcanic fragments with many trapped air bubbles.
Many air bubbles would be trapped under it .
Hydrogen plus yeast equals air bubbles?
Air bubbles still trapped in the system
The chips with air bubbles seem more salty because when they are coating it with salt they roll in a giant barrel really.. the finest salt particles can fall in and get trapped inside the bubbles