Soda is carbonated; it contains carbonic acid which becomes carbon dioxide gas and turns into bubbles, when it is not under pressure. Some mineral water is also carbonated. Perrier, for example, does have bubbles, although to a lesser extent than a typical soda. But mineral water varies. Different springs have different kinds of mineral content.
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....
These are gas bubbles where water is starting to vaporize.
Mineral water without carbonation. The water having no bubbles is still. :)
plan water isn't good.
mineral water bottle coke bottle castrol oil bottle soy sauce bottle juices bottle
The pollution in the sea (sodas) create a foam NOT bubbles
They are the same. When cold water heats up and bubbles that means it is boiling.
Around $0.08 per bottle.
The bubbles are water vapour (ie steam) bubbles, not air. Therefore any heating of water back up to boiling point will renew the process of water vapour bubbles occurring.
The correct response is big, bursting bubbles.
The air will rise into the upper bottle in bubbles while the water splatters and drips down into the lower bottle. No vortex is formed.
The "Water bottle" is designed to store the water that is boiling. When the water in the radiator gets hot, it boils, which then gets ejected into the bottle to cool, once the engine has cooled, the pressure causes it to be sucked back into the radiator thus restarting the process. Its perfectly normal for all cars, don't be alarmed.