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Does a bubble have weight

Updated: 8/17/2019
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14y ago

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A bubble has weight because when you are making bubbles the liquid you are using it has weight wright. The weight makes the bubble go down and pop.

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14y ago
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Q: Does a bubble have weight
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Can chewing too much Dubble Bubble cause weight gain?

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Why does potential energy when water bubble rises from water?

This is rather complicated, as it involves work being done by the force of buoyancy. One way to look at this is to imagine the bubble as a balloon having a negligible weight relative to the weight of the air it contains. In air, this imaginary balloon weighs nothing because (by Archimedes Principle) it is buoyed up by a force exactly equal to the weight of the air it displaces. Now submerge this "balloon" in water. So long as it is submerged, the "balloon" will experience a buoyancy force upward (i.e., towards the surface of the water) equal to the weight of the water it displaces minus the weight of the air due to gravity. The buoyancy force (Fb) will accelerate the air in the bubble at a constant rate upward. Since work is equal to force times distance, the amount of work, W, done in moving the air in the bubble from some submerged position, xo, to a position at the surface, xs, will be W=Fb *(xs-xo). The difference in position is just the depth, d, of the bubble relative to the water surface, so W=Fb*d. One can regard this quantity as the potential energy, PE, of the submerged air bubble: PE=Fb*d. If we correctly note that the weight of the air in the bubble is insignificant relative to the weight of the water it displaces, we can say that PE is equal to the weight of the water that is displaced times the depth of the bubble. (The depth of the bubble is the depth relative to the center of the sphere described by the bubble.) This is the energy that will be imparted to the air in the bubble as it rises in the water. Conversely, this is also how much energy it will take to move the bubble from its position at the water surface to a certain depth. Things get really complicated as the bubble emerges from the water, because the buoyancy force reduces from the weight of the displaced water to zero, but this will usually be a very small effect.


Is it theoretically possible to create a massive bubble large enough to swim in the wall of it?

I don't think so - not any "normal" bubble, at any rate. Such a bubble could not be stable - its weight would pull it down, destroying it immediately.


Does substance affect the size of the bubble?

Yes it does. When you blow a bubble you increase the pressure inside of it. So now we have a sphere with more pressure inside than out. The inside pressure pushes the skin of the bubble outward and stretches it. This is very much like hanging a weight from a rubber band. The rubber band stretches, but only so much. The tension in the band increases the more it is stretched until the tension equals the weight. If you add more weight then the rubber band stretches more. The same for the bubble, the skin of the bubble stretches (bubble gets bigger) until the tension in the skin matches the pressure in the bubble. A different substance will stretch more or less. There are complicating factors: pressure decreases inside the bubble as it expands, responses are not linear blah blah blah. But the simple answer is that just like a rope will stretch less than a rubber band, so different bubble substances will expand differently to make different sized bubbles.


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Are objects wrapped in bubble wrap lighter?

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How heavy is the biggest bubble?

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