It is uses water which is carbonated hence it is called Carbonated Water. Or it can be referred as Carbonic Gas.
Carbon dioxide
carbon
Which gas escapes out from many aerated soft drinks
carbon dioxide
I don't no
Carbonated water (aka soda water) contains carbon dioxide gas that is held in a suspension within the liquid. So long as the drink is tightly closed, the pressure keeps the gas dissolved in the liquid. As soon as the pressure decreases - in other words, as soon as you open the drink - the gas escapes. The faster the pressure decreases, the more the carbon dioxide bubbles up, and sometimes it escapes so fast that it bubbles over.
It expands (escapes).
The air will
Funny question :p Soft drinks are compounds. Examples of elements are oxygen, hydrogen, sulfur, and carbon. They are pure substances that cannot be separated into any smaller substances. Compounds are simply mixtures of different elements. A compound can indeed be broken down into smaller parts. For example, water is H20. That is, two hydrogen atoms connected to an oxygen atom. Thus it is a compound. Well, for me, neither of the two. Soft Drinks are mixtures/solutions. Mixtures can be defined as pure substances(compounds) combined together that can still be separated. Soft Drinks are several compounds mixed together, and can still be separated. If you want to know how to separate them, search the internet.
The fizziness itself has no significant effect on teeth. However the sugars commonly found in most fizzy drinks (except club soda, for instance) does promote the growth of organisms in the mouth that promote tooth decay.
Carbon dioxide.
Carbon Dioxide gives the 'fiz' in carbonated soft drinks.
Carbon Dioxide gives the 'fiz' in carbonated soft drinks.
carbon dioxide is found in soft drinks especially fizzy drinks
Soft drinks are also known as carbonated drinks. Have you thought why? Soft drinks contain chuge quantities of carbon dioxide under high pressure. The high pressure causes the gas to remain in dissolved state. Hence, when you open the bottle, the pressure falls, and the dissolved carbon dioxide can no longer remain dissolved, and hence escapes off, as fizzing.
Carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide.
by keeping your drinks cold, gas particles(like CO2 in soft drinks) do not enter the gaseous state as easily(fizz.)
The gas in fizzy drinks is carbon dioxide. When under pressure, carbon dioxide easily dissolves into water. It is a gas without color or odor.
Effervescence is the escape of gas from an aqueous solution, for example a soft drink when opened will "fizz" as the carbon dioxide gas that was pressurised into the drink escapes.
Carbonated water (aka soda water) contains carbon dioxide gas that is held in a suspension within the liquid. So long as the drink is tightly closed, the pressure keeps the gas dissolved in the liquid. As soon as the pressure decreases - in other words, as soon as you open the drink - the gas escapes. The faster the pressure decreases, the more the carbon dioxide bubbles up, and sometimes it escapes so fast that it bubbles over.
Mostly food containg carbonates caused gas like soft drinks and fatty substance too.