If you drop a chunk of dry ice into warm water it crates a fog and bubbling effect. You can also add dishsoap to get bubbles coming out of the container. *Never touch Dry ice with bare skin you thick glove or tongs. *Dry ice is sold in most supermarkets.
if you mean 'what actually makes up a bubble' then it is the liquid formation of the product you have used.
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.
A bubble contains a gas (such as air or CO2) that is lighter than the liquid around it (such as water); so the weight of the liquid pulls it down, which pushes the gas up..
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).
A bubble is simply a pocket of air within a liquid. I would assume they arise due to nucleation phenomenon or possibly hydrophobic interactions.
baking soda makes it bubble it usally makes everything bubble
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.
Teeth
It is. A bubble is air closed with solid or liquid around it. So scientifically, it's a bubble!
Topps Company makes Bazooka Bubble Gum