The density of the bubble is lower.
If you are asking about a bubble in a liquid, the answer is that the bubble has lower density (the gas inside is "lighter") than the surrounding liquid. If you are asking about a soap bubble, the answer is that air currents carry the bubble up. The bubble itself is not lighter than air (unless filled with another gas) but the film making the bubble is so thin and light that air currents can move it easily.
oxygen and carbon minoxide and bubble gas co2
Carbonated soda has CO2 in it because the gas make the soda bubble and fizz.
CO2
A bubble contains a gas (such as air or CO2) that is lighter than the liquid around it (such as water); so the weight of the liquid pulls it down, which pushes the gas up..
In order to float, the bubble hitches a ride on a gas that is slightly denser than the air trapped inside of it: carbon dioxide!
dawn has the most dish soap bubbles...hope i helped u
Balloons are solids. They are filled with gases.
take a spray bottle and mix it with water and some soap and spray that were you think that you might have a leak and if the soap starts to bubble you have a leak there.
The HNO3 and NaHCO3 will produce NaNO3, H2O, and CO2. The CO2 will bubble off as a gas. HNO3 + NaHCO3 --> NaNO3 + H2O + CO2 This is an irreversible reaction as one of the products (CO2) escapes.
This is the result of the volume of a gas being related to the temperature of a gas. The gas in the bubble expands when it warms and contracts when it cools. Similarly, the air in the room expands when it warms and contracts when it cools. So if the air in the bubble is warmer than the air in the room, the bubble gets bigger.
Carbon Dioxide