When water and baking soda are stirred together, bubbles will form. These bubbles are carbon dioxide.
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.
Boiling water, champagne, soda water.
Soda is pumped witth bubbles of carbon, or Co2.
Soda was invented by Joseph Priestley in 1767. He modeled soda after the bubbles he found in natural mineral water.
I suppose that the difference is minimal.
Soda is not a fruit. It is usually referring to water that has had carbon dioxide dissolved in it. The gas comes out of the solution and creates fizzy bubbles. It can be added to fruit juice, but most soda or pop is corn syrup and flavoring.
The correct response is big, bursting bubbles.
You need to add carbonated water .
The carbon mixes with the water. All it does is cause bubbles and fizzing.
Yes you can, all those little bubbles that float from the bottom to the top are Carbon Dioxide bubbles.
No, bubbles in soda water are carbon dioxide (introduced to the bottle when manufactured) whereas bubbles in regular water are entrapped air (introduced say by aerating over a water fall or the like - they can also occur in tap water by getting air in the pipes and then being entrapped when being pumped through the network of pipes to your house).