When water boils the gasses which where absorbed are liberated and they expand as a result of the heat causing bubbles which then rise to the surface upon further heating it would be the water turning to steam that expands into bubbles, that is why the bubbles only form at the point of contact with the heat source. there could be some oxygen in the bubbles but it would be extremely small amounts as the heat does not split the bond between the oxygen and the hydrogen.
When water boils, the bubbles are made of water vapor. Water is changing from the liquid phase to the gas phase, but it doesn't change all at once, so you get bubbles of gas inside the liquid. The phase change will happen first at the location where heating is taking place, so if you have a pot on a stove, the bubbles will form at the bottom of the pot, and then rise to the top.
It produces Carbon di oxide which makes bubbles. Also chalk when it's made, has many vacuum in it.
This question is too vague to answer: many different substances boil at many different degrees Celsius. In fact the same substance can be made to boil at different temperatures by changing the pressure acting on it.
Yes. A tsunami consists of large waves or surges of water.
No, that's impossible. Water becomes steam when it boils, and that's just water in the gas phase. Water is made of hydrogen and oxygen. There are no carbon atoms there to form carbon dioxide, and carbon dioxide contains no hydrogen.
O2-Oxygen
When water boils, the bubbles are made of water vapor. Water is changing from the liquid phase to the gas phase, but it doesn't change all at once, so you get bubbles of gas inside the liquid. The phase change will happen first at the location where heating is taking place, so if you have a pot on a stove, the bubbles will form at the bottom of the pot, and then rise to the top.
the bubbles in boiling water is water in a gasious state rising to the surface.
BUBBLES BUBBLES The bubbles are made of EFTE which is a green feature.
they are made of water vapour that boils the wood and graphite
Radiation releases large amounts of heat. The heat boils water, which turns turbines connected to generators. Electricity is thus made.
yes does bubbles at the top of the water are made by spit
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.
Pumice floats on water. It is because it is made out of lava which had bubbles left inside it. The bubbles has air trapped in it. These bubbles allow pumice to float on water.
Bubbles cannot just be made with plain water; you need to add soap or something else like that. Shampoo, bubble bath, soap etc...
Adding salt to water and detergent will not make bubbles. Sugar doesn't effect the mixture, as we seemed to get bigger bubbles than just water and soap. This may also be due to the issue that the person we appointed to blow the water and soap mixture couldn't blow a big enough bubble. - Jelly We also found adding sugar to detergent water made bigger bubbles and it was the same person blowing all of the bubbles. -A
It produces Carbon di oxide which makes bubbles. Also chalk when it's made, has many vacuum in it.