Want this question answered?
Do bubbles escape when you squeeze a sponge under water air
A sponge has air bubbles.
Yes (air bubbles).
Air bubbles will escape
bubbles appear when you squeeze a wet sponge because as well as pushing the water out you are pushing the air out to, there fore creating bubbles....
Those are air bubbles.
Yes because air bubbles are introduced in the making of sponge cake. For example, when it's whisked,folded,sieved and cooked.
Their are two families the sponge comes from; Plakinidae and Oscarellidae. The phylum is Porifera.
The density of the polymer will be very close to, usually a little under, 1, the density of the sponge will depend entirely upon how much polymer and how much space (air/bubbles) there is in it.
Bubbles where invented in a London company here is a weblink happy searching bubbles.org/html/history/bubhistory.htm
due to capillary action water raises in chalk.. and the air in it comes out in form of bubbles...
The water displaces air, which moves to the top. It comes up through the water layer, creating bubbles.