Without detergent it does not. If you add something like washing up liquid to heated water you can get good bubbles (too watery and they won't have the strength to grow well)
It can . . . bubbles come from oxygen that is dissolved in the water. Pureness has little to do with it, unless the pure water has simply not been shaken up so as to dissolve oxygen into it.
Typically passing electricity through tap water will begin to separate the hydrogen and oxygen in H2O. Oxygen bubbles will begin to accumulate at the positive contact and hydrogen to accumulate at the negative contact.
no
yess bottled water does i don't know about tap water
yeah.. Tap water will evoporate faster since Carbonated water is usually containing salts, charged under pressure with purified carbon dioxide gas, used as a beverage or mixer which make it or requires much heat. While the Tap water which Water drawn directly from a tap or faucet can evaporate quickly.
The bubbles in tap water are usually trapped air. The water travels through underground pipes where it is relatively cold and under pressure. When it comes out of the tap and into (for example) a glass it is no longer pressurised. It quickly begins to warm and the tiny bubbles of trapped air rapidly expand to a size where they can readily be seen.
cause u and i furt in it cause u and i furt in it
The bubbles will always be white even if the bubble bath is a different color because it is the oxygen in the water that creates the bubbles. When the water foams, it is just like the bubbles on top of a beer that is poured from a tap. The bubbles are mostly air.
It can . . . bubbles come from oxygen that is dissolved in the water. Pureness has little to do with it, unless the pure water has simply not been shaken up so as to dissolve oxygen into it.
Tap water
yeah, did you ever make ice cubes before? you use tap water.
No, bubbles in soda water are carbon dioxide (introduced to the bottle when manufactured) whereas bubbles in regular water are entrapped air (introduced say by aerating over a water fall or the like - they can also occur in tap water by getting air in the pipes and then being entrapped when being pumped through the network of pipes to your house).
That is dissolved air in the water. Tap water can be the temperature of the ground, which in the winter is nearly freezing. As the water heats up standing around at room temprerature , the tempeature of the water rises. It is a chemistry law, that the solubility of a gas in a liquid decreases as the temperature rises. As the temperature rises, air is forced out of the water in the form of those bubbles.
Depends how much tap water you are using. :)
First switch on the faucet/tap on your bathtub, with the plug in of course, and pour in a good amount of the bubble bath into the tub whilst the water is still running. This will help make more bubbles. When the bathtub is filled and you have switched off the water, if you want to make more bubbles just swish your hand around the bath to create more. Then you simply climb in and enjoy! :)
Typically passing electricity through tap water will begin to separate the hydrogen and oxygen in H2O. Oxygen bubbles will begin to accumulate at the positive contact and hydrogen to accumulate at the negative contact.
Definitley tap water. The chemicals in it make i grow better than tea does =)