Hot water will dissolve soap faster because it is more hot so that means it will melt is and also evaporate with the water.
Over time it will shrink and get smaller, yes. Hope this helps.
it proably will disolve faster in pop cause all the sugar piling on the soap and at the same time it depends on how hot your water is.
chocolate
yes
no pop does not dissolve in water.. because gypsum is treated with water ..it follows two steps1. setting step2. hardening stepfor hardening H2o is added.then ultimately if the water harden the gypsum , it cannot be dissolved using water ..but Can be dissolved using chemicals
Yes, it does last longer in hot water because of the humidity.
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.
chocolate
i did a experiment does a tootsie pop or blow pop dissolve faster it took one hour and eighteen minutes to dissolve the blow pop: )
coka cola
yes
a marshmallow is made up of corn syrup which increases its ability to dissolve and soda pop is caffeine which can dissolve it fastest
Yes
we did this in science yesterday.The bubbles in sprite need to latch on to somthing to expandmints or mentos as we used have millions of thesethey expand and pop the bottlebut with this they can dissolve it by puishing inwards.
Becasue of chemical chain reactions.
First if you have water then that liquid makes the bubble.if you suck All of the water out of the cup then the bubble will pop!!!!!!
A very familar one would be soda or pop as some say.
No! Clean them with soap and water. If they're open put an antibacterial on them and calamine if they're itchy. But it's best to not pop them.
no pop does not dissolve in water.. because gypsum is treated with water ..it follows two steps1. setting step2. hardening stepfor hardening H2o is added.then ultimately if the water harden the gypsum , it cannot be dissolved using water ..but Can be dissolved using chemicals