Water
It's a gas that is inside a liquid (the bubble is the liquid).
It's a gas that is inside a liquid (the bubble is the liquid).
the bubble will probably pop before you can even light it Different answer: If the gas inside the bubble is flammable, it will burn... assuming the bubble doesn't pop first. For instance, a methane bubble will burn if you light it, though one filled with regular air will not.
Because It's made of a liquid formed type of feeces called bobble that is where the word bubble comes from.
It is. A bubble is air closed with solid or liquid around it. So scientifically, it's a bubble!
hassan
When the blow on the gum, air builds up and comes out as a bubble.
If a liquid is flammable it will burn. Flammable means can catch on fire.
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.
only in imaginationland
An antibubble is the opposite of a bubble. A soap bubble in air is a thin film of liquid surrounding air. An antibubble in liquid is a thin film of air surrounding liquid.
A bubble has weight because when you are making bubbles the liquid you are using it has weight wright. The weight makes the bubble go down and pop.