i really dont know
dry ice is frozen co2
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The answer for hypothesis is where you do your experiment and then you look back at your problem then that's when you get your hypothesis . LOL :) have a great day
in 5th grade a boy put it in apple juice and it started bubbling, i thought it was awesome!
No, you simply can't convert dry ice into water. This is primarily because dry ice is made out of Carbon Dioxide (CO2). It also sublimates directly from solid to gas meaning that there is no water residue, unlike that or ordinary water ice when it melts. Check link below for more information on dry ice and dry ice makers.
the purpose is how is is getting bigger
nothing
dry ice is frozen co2
Hypothesis: I think the fog will affect the bubble and the expect that when all the fog builds up into the bubble the dry ice bubble is going to burst. I think that because when all the fog from the dry ice builds up in to the bubble then it is going to burst.
Well, this was answered by a 10 year old kid. It happens when a normal soap bubble meets co2 filling the bubble.
The strip of clothing you should use for the dry ice bubble must be 100% cotton
Not water. 'Dry Ice' is frozen Carbon Dioxide.
No, you can not use ice instead of regular ice in the cloud chamber experiment. It would not react the same way. Dry ice is frozen carbon dioxide, the cloud chamber experiment relies on the sublimation of solid CO2 into gas.
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Assuming the bubble occurs in water then the bubble contains almost pure CO2. It should be cooler than the water. and it will rise tothe surface.
Yes, you can put dry ice in salt water. It will bubble furiously and cool down the salt water.
To reduce dry ice loss, make sure to pack dry ice as close to each other as possible. Fill any empty space with new bubble packs, newspaper or Styrofoam peanuts since the space will cause the dry ice to sublimate faster.