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yes. Because methane is lighter than any liquid, bubbles of methane will always rise in solution.
It travels faster in a liquid than in a gas, but it would travel faster still in a solid.
My answer is, that there are air bubbles in the bottom of it, (WHEN ITS BOILING) Than those air bubbles rise to the top, & That's how hot water bubbles more than cold water.
Yes. Warm air hair dryers tend to pop soap bubbles by drying them out. The bubble is a thin layer of liquid held together by surface tension, and soap keeps the liquid suspended longer than ordinary bubbles in water.
liquid rushes faster at the bottom hole than tops because pressure in liquids is directly proportional to the height of the liquid.that is the deeper the liquid the higher the pressure
bubbles rise to the surface of a heated liquid as it changes to gas because they are less dense than the liquid.
yes. Because methane is lighter than any liquid, bubbles of methane will always rise in solution.
big bubbles can pop pretty fast but small bubbles can't pop faster. by. Adam 8) I like bubbles. :P
Bubbles are comprised of gases, which have a lesser density than water. Since they are less dense, they get pushed up to the surface, and they rise, lighter than the liquid around them.
Since the bubbles have less density than the surrounding water, gravity pulls the water down, and the bubbles go up.
the answer is bubbles are found in liquids.................
Yes, bigger bubbles reach the ground sooner than smaller bubbles do.
Inside this zone is where hot gas bubbles rise faster than they can cool meaning that this zone would look exactly like a LavaLamp!!!
Carbon dioxide makes up the air bubbles, and carbon dioxide is lighter than lemonade, so the bubbles rise to the top.
Sound will usually move faster in a solid than in a liquid.
Sound will usually move faster in a solid than in a liquid.
Most materials expand with the temperature increases. In this case, the liquid in the thermometer expands faster than the glass that holds it.