Yes, it is the gas that causes all the bubbles when you open the beverage.
for divers and in hospital
CO2
the soda pop fizzes when opened becasue the carbon dioxide is being mixed with oxygen with causes a reaction like you have seen in the soda pop
for that carbon dixiode inside is traped thats a real answer
To conduct an experiment on what makes soda pop fizz one needs a cork, carbonated drink and carbon dioxide. When the carbonated drink is sealed in the bottled together with the carbon dioxide and opened the soda will fizz.
Carbon dioxide gas is what makes the bubbles in soda pop. When the soda is carbonated, carbon dioxide is dissolved in the liquid under pressure. When the pressure is released (such as when you open the bottle), the carbon dioxide gas is released, forming bubbles.
The molecules present inside a bubble within soda pop are primarily carbon dioxide gas molecules.
A very familar one would be soda or pop as some say.
The soda and pop rock thing actually does really work. When you add pop rocks to soda pop the soda fizzles in the same way it would if you dropped it and immediately opened it.
In soda pop, the solvent would be the water. In a solution, the substance that is being dissolved in the solute.
Carbon dioxide is used for a great many things in the world. Plants for example need carbon dioxide in order to breathe.
The scientific term for something that is fizzing or producing bubbles is effervescent.