The rock that fizzes when applied to vinegar is MARBLE, you will have to grind it up into powder first though.
Edited by Sjheerts:
actually no it is not marble. it is something inside the marble. it is called calcite
Limestone Limestone
Limestone
Like stone
The product of this chemical reaction is casein, a protein.
Of a chemical reaction, the acidic vinegar reacts with the baking soda and one of the by products is a gas, carbon dioxide, that gas is the bubbles.
air bubbles
There is a vinegar test for limestone where if the vinegar bubbles on the rock it's a limestone
Vinegar, when added to bicarbonate of soda (or baking soda), will produce the described effect.
It is a mixture. A homogeneous type of mixture because each substance is equally mixed. Bubbles are made of alcohol, soap, and vinegar. :D
I did this science practical at school i added half a teaspoon of sodium carbonate to 20 ml of vinegar. It fizzed up then after about ten seconds went down.
a substance used in any processes
An effervescent substance is a substance that is either containing bubbles or producing bubbles.
No, but it depends on what kind of bubbles you are trying to make. Soap bubbles aren't made out of water and baking soda. You can add baking soda to vinegar and create bubbles, as you've seen in fake volcanoes.
The product of this chemical reaction is casein, a protein.
poops the vinegar
Of a chemical reaction, the acidic vinegar reacts with the baking soda and one of the by products is a gas, carbon dioxide, that gas is the bubbles.
air bubbles
The reaction causes carbon dioxide which bubbles up and forms vinegar bubbles.
I fizzes and bubbles
The answer is simple , Vinegar and salt