You can use toothpaste with anything even beer
Would toothpaste desolve better water or in soda.
Water is added to yeast in the elephant toothpaste experiment to activate it. Yeast is a microorganism that becomes active in the presence of water, which allows it to produce carbon dioxide gas needed for the reaction. This gas creates the foamy explosion seen in the experiment.
1 day without water.
To make big elephant toothpaste, mix hydrogen peroxide, dish soap, and food coloring in a container. Then, add yeast mixed with warm water to the mixture. The reaction will create a foamy eruption, resembling toothpaste for elephants.
Not long they die
To conduct the elephant toothpaste experiment, you will need hydrogen peroxide, dish soap, food coloring, a container, yeast, warm water, and safety goggles. Mix the hydrogen peroxide, dish soap, and food coloring in the container. In a separate container, mix the yeast with warm water. Pour the yeast mixture into the hydrogen peroxide mixture and watch as the foam (elephant toothpaste) is created. Be sure to wear safety goggles and conduct the experiment in a well-ventilated area.
It is a chemical experiment using hydrogen peroxide and potassium iodide, mixed with detergent and water. If you add all these together, the hydrogen peroxide's decomposition is sped up by the catalyst, potassium iodide. Oxygen is given off and forms foam with the detergent. The foam pushes up in the cylinder or test tube and comes out the top looking like toothpaste, hence elephant's toothpaste.
Toothpaste is basically a soap, so yes, it dissolves in water.
Any liquid will have the same effect on toothpaste as water.
To successfully conduct the elephant toothpaste experiment, gather materials such as hydrogen peroxide, yeast, dish soap, and warm water. Mix the hydrogen peroxide with the dish soap and warm water in a container. In a separate container, mix yeast with warm water. Pour the yeast mixture into the hydrogen peroxide mixture and observe the foamy reaction. Ensure safety measures are in place, such as wearing goggles and gloves.
Water for Elephants has 335 pages.
Water for Elephants was created on 2006-05-26.