it will not hurt you. you will just glow till you wash it off. [that does not mean you should put it in your mouth though]
When you snap a glow stick to make it glow, it will glow.
You you break a glow stick it will be shorter in size and may not glow well.
The glow stick in the cold water will not glow as bright as the glow stick in the hot water because when you cool the glow stick down, the chemical process will slow down. The glow stick in the hot water will glow brighter but for a shorter period of time.
Obviously it is not that thick. The vile inside breaks when you bend a glow stick. Therefore, the vile is very fragile and thin, so it is easy to break.
They contain chemicals, some of which are in a fragile glass (or possibly brittle plastic) container to keep them separated. When you snap the stick, the internal container breaks and allows the chemicals to mix, starting the reaction that produces the light.
Nothing happens, just wash it off rite away.
When you snap a glow stick to make it glow, it will glow.
You you break a glow stick it will be shorter in size and may not glow well.
you wash it and if it doesnt work try again.
The glow stick in the cold water will not glow as bright as the glow stick in the hot water because when you cool the glow stick down, the chemical process will slow down. The glow stick in the hot water will glow brighter but for a shorter period of time.
It's a chemical change--there's a glass ampule in the glow stick. and it's got one chemical in it. Around it is another chemical. When you break the glow stick the two chemicals mix, and the glow happens.
you would get poisned
prepare to die.
is not toxic, do not worry you will not die
Obviously it is not that thick. The vile inside breaks when you bend a glow stick. Therefore, the vile is very fragile and thin, so it is easy to break.
Yes there is a pigment in the stick after the chemical reaction & it will stain floors & textiles
They contain chemicals, some of which are in a fragile glass (or possibly brittle plastic) container to keep them separated. When you snap the stick, the internal container breaks and allows the chemicals to mix, starting the reaction that produces the light.