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.
Yes, gasoline can burn your skin if it comes into contact with it because it is a flammable liquid that can cause irritation, redness, and even blistering upon contact.
A bubble on the surface of a liquid is formed when air or another gas is trapped within the liquid, typically due to agitation. The surface tension of the liquid creates a thin film around the gas, producing the bubble shape. As the gas inside the bubble expands or contracts, the size of the bubble may change.
Two forces acting on a bubble as it rises through a liquid are buoyancy force, which pushes the bubble upward due to the difference in density between the bubble and the liquid, and drag force, which resist the movement of the bubble through the liquid by frictional resistance.
It is. A bubble is air closed with solid or liquid around it. So scientifically, it's a bubble!
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.
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.
get the stuff that you spray on it and it sooths the burning