No they don't. They're not living things
the air when you are blowing
Dolphins sometimes blow air bubbles when they are bored.
The soap creates the base of the bubble while air fills it in to create a balloon
They blow air bubbles which may mean a sign of lack of air or they may be pregnant and are making a nest for the eggs.
The bubbles have air or some other gas in them that is lighter than water.
You can blow gently with a straw to blow bubbles in your sea monkey tank.
Yes. Blow bubbles the next time you go swimming or take a bath. You will see the bubbles rise. Air is several hundred times less dense than water.
Aquatic crabs held above the water will produce bubbles through respiration. They draw the air into the space between their claws and shell (arm pit area essentially) and blow it out through their mouth. The protein in the water keeps the bubbles formed from bursting quickly, thus they "blow bubbles".
If you're talking about soap bubbles, they go down simply because the little bit of soap they are made of is heavier than the air. I think its also because when you blow into them, you blow Carbon Dioxide, wich (I am pretty sure) is heavier than the rest of the air.
there is vacuum inside the air bubble. since air bubles are formed on the principle of marangoni's Theorem ( surface tension), the water molecules aquire the spherical shape of the bubbles quickly, leaving no air inside the bubble..... the air bubbles or the soap bubbles are used to solve many space and gravity related problems... i hope i have provided u with the correct solution....
Its the person chewing the gum that produces the bubbles, not the bubble gum itself. Air being trapped into a "gap" ,so to speak, in the gum creates a bubble. Some gum is easier to blow bubbles with because of how far the gum can stretch with out breaking and letting air out.
To remove the air bubbles, open the stopcock and the air bubbles will remove