First, start with a large circle of wire - an old coat hanger is OK.
Then establish the film of soap water liquid across the circle.
Then move it smartly through the air. You should be able to make bubbles of .5m or so.
Experiment some more - viscosity of soap mix, size of wire circle, speed of movement.
Lemon juice does make big bubbles because it lightens the mixture, allowing the bubble to get bigger.
The correct response is big, bursting bubbles.
No sorry, people can not step into big bubbles but if you are talking about the big hamster balls that some people go in than yes people can. But into like a big blown bubble from a container of bubbles is not possible.
If there are big bubbles that pop then it is boiled
Yes, bigger bubbles reach the ground sooner than smaller bubbles do.
Bubbles decide what they want to do and when the want to pop. So you have no control over how the bubbles act.
You can make chewing gum bubbles by stretching it over your tongue and blowing into the space between your tongue and the gum. Gum itself doesn't make bubbles by itself, thought that would be freaking awesome.
Injecting air bubbles when administering medications can cause implications such as stopping blood flow. Having small little bubbles is not a big deal, but you do need to try to your best to make sure there isn't any.
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)
When you add salt to soap it will make more bubbles. not bigger bubbles but more bubbles.
Goldfish make bubbles underwater by releasing air from their gills, which creates bubbles that rise to the surface of the water.
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.