a bubble will freeze in the winter time .Suppose you go out to do bubbles outside and if you start blowing the bubbles the bubble will freeze....
Sure! I mean, they won't freeze completly, not like an ice cube. But, if you blow a bubble in really cold tempatures, it becomes a sturdy bubble. If you pop it, it turns into a sort of confetti and floats to the ground. Thank you! I wanted to know because I have a chemistry science project I need to do. I might do this...
advantagaes of bubble sensing
If you are asking about a bubble in a liquid, the answer is that the bubble has lower density (the gas inside is "lighter") than the surrounding liquid. If you are asking about a soap bubble, the answer is that air currents carry the bubble up. The bubble itself is not lighter than air (unless filled with another gas) but the film making the bubble is so thin and light that air currents can move it easily.
As a bubble rises to the surface of a liquid the pressure on it is going DOWN. Therefore the bubble expands, and usually bursts at the surface.
bigger bubble blowers hold more solution than smaller ones, so more can be used to make a bubble.
only in imaginationland
ethanol, it won't freeze
bobo ka,try to answer it youre self
4 Lightning/Electric Bubble Flame Freeze/Ice
freeze the garment and pick it off do as many times as required freeze the garment and pick it off do as many times as required
Sure! I mean, they won't freeze completly, not like an ice cube. But, if you blow a bubble in really cold tempatures, it becomes a sturdy bubble. If you pop it, it turns into a sort of confetti and floats to the ground. Thank you! I wanted to know because I have a chemistry science project I need to do. I might do this...
When you increase the the temperature of the bubble solution, the molecules in the liquid and the gas inside the bubble are moving more quickly. This can cause the solution to thin faster. Also, the film that forms the bubble will evaporate more quickly, causing it to pop. On the other hand, at warmer temperatures the air in a closed container will become more humid, which will slow the rate of evaporation and therefore slow the rate at which the bubbles will pop. When you lower the temperature you might reach a point where the soap in your bubble solution becomes insoluble in water. Basically a sufficiently cold temperature might keep the bubble solution from forming the film needed to make bubbles. If you lower the temperature enough, you may be able to freeze the solution or freeze the bubble solution, thus slowing the rate at which they will pop.
Double bubble!
I doubt it, it would burst in the fridge! Edit By Brittany Hanson: Yes in a way they freeze. You go outside in Freezing temperatures of at least 0- F or -18 C and blow the bubbles, they will then turn into crystallized bubbles and if you pop them, they will slowly fall down in a confetti like form.
throwing a bubble means to blow a bubble normally in a bubble gum
bubble bubble bubble bubble
Bubble tape