OF course
what makes bubbles brake is the presur of the air moving up and the air presur moving down compackting the bubble airgo making it pop.
Bubbles pop when the thin layer of soap or water that forms the bubble's surface breaks, causing the air inside to escape. This can happen due to factors like evaporation, contact with a solid surface, or changes in temperature or air pressure.
Bubbles aren't living. Bubbles pop, not die.
Yes. Warm air hair dryers tend to pop soap bubbles by drying them out. The bubble is a thin layer of liquid held together by surface tension, and soap keeps the liquid suspended longer than ordinary bubbles in water.
Air bubbles containing carbon dioxide rise to the surface of the drink once the bubbles pop, they release the carbon dioxide.
Yes, a hair dryer can be used to remove bubbles from resin by gently blowing warm air over the surface to help the bubbles rise and pop.
I am pretty sure not because they would soon run out of air or the bubble would pop.
No, in most cases both big and small bubbles fall at the same rate because they experience the same drag force from the surrounding air. The size of the bubble does not significantly affect how fast it falls.
As the cheese ferment the bacteria consumes the sugar and produce gas wich in turn creates small bubbles in the cheese.
BUBBLES!
A pop it is a game I LOVE. U pop da bubbles. Its fun :)
To remove the air bubbles, open the stopcock and the air bubbles will remove