Bubbles are made of oxygen when they are formed during a process called electrolysis, where water molecules are split into oxygen and hydrogen gas. This can be demonstrated in a laboratory setting by passing an electric current through water. Additionally, the composition of bubbles can be confirmed through chemical analysis.
If the bubbles do not relight a glowing splint, it would suggest they are not oxygen. Oxygen is a gas that supports combustion, so if the bubbles do not allow the splint to reignite, it indicates they are not oxygen.
If the bubbles produced can relight a glowing splint or support combustion, it would provide indirect evidence that the bubbles are oxygen (O2). This is because oxygen is required to support combustion.
The bubbles blown by dolphins are different from soap bubbles blown by people. Dolphin bubbles are created underwater using their blowholes, while soap bubbles are typically made by blowing air through a soapy solution above the water's surface. Dolphin bubbles are used for play and social interactions, while human-made soap bubbles are for entertainment and recreational purposes.
Water bottles get bubbles due to the presence of dissolved gases, such as oxygen and carbon dioxide, in the water. When the bottle is sealed, the pressure inside increases, causing the gases to come out of solution and form bubbles.
Bubbles in soda are made of carbon dioxide gas that is dissolved in the liquid under pressure. When the soda is opened or poured, the pressure is released and the carbon dioxide gas forms bubbles in the liquid, creating the fizziness.
You can not see photosynthesis but you can see its results. Algae in water exposed to sunlight will give off bubbles. These bubbles are made of Oxygen gas. The Oxygen is a waste product of the photosynthesis process.
The bubbles in boiling water are made of water vapor, which is the gaseous form of water. As the water heats up, it turns into steam and creates bubbles that rise to the surface and eventually burst.
This is very vague. Oxygen bubbles would be produced by some kind of chemical reaction in which one of the results is oxygen. Do you have more specifics as to when/where these oxygen bubbles would be produced?
If the bubbles do not relight a glowing splint, it would suggest they are not oxygen. Oxygen is a gas that supports combustion, so if the bubbles do not allow the splint to reignite, it indicates they are not oxygen.
An aquatic plant bubbles because it releases oxygen bubbles. The oxygen bubbles float to the surface of the water and get released in to the air.
Yes
Oxygen is a by-product of photosynthesis.
Oxygen bubbles are produced when water molecules are broken apart through photosynthesis or electrolysis. This process releases oxygen gas as a byproduct.
When water boils the gasses which where absorbed are liberated and they expand as a result of the heat causing bubbles which then rise to the surface upon further heating it would be the water turning to steam that expands into bubbles, that is why the bubbles only form at the point of contact with the heat source. there could be some oxygen in the bubbles but it would be extremely small amounts as the heat does not split the bond between the oxygen and the hydrogen.
When the catalase comes in contact with hydrogen peroxide, it turns the hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) into water. The bubbles you see in the foam are pure oxygen bubbles being created by the catalase.
Photosynthesis produces oxygen.
If the bubbles produced can relight a glowing splint or support combustion, it would provide indirect evidence that the bubbles are oxygen (O2). This is because oxygen is required to support combustion.