Yes they will both bubble at the same speed too.
Mixing cold vinegar with baking soda will result in a smaller reaction compared to using room temperature vinegar. This is because the reaction between baking soda and vinegar is exothermic, meaning it produces heat. Warmer vinegar provides more energy for the reaction, leading to a more vigorous fizzing reaction.
Baking soda and vinegar gets cold in a reaction called an endothermic reaction. Ectothermic reactions get warm, endo cold. All the heat is taken in by the baking soda and used as energy. If you add more baking soda, more baking soda will take in energy and make it colder. Source(s): Fith Grade science project done in Los Gatos, CA
Heat would speed up the reaction, while cold would slow the reaction.
Yes it does because the molecules in the hot vineger are moving around faster soit mixes with the baking soda quicker and if the vineger is cold the molecules are moving slower causing it to take more time.
Vinegar reacts with the baking soda, producing carbon dioxide and sodium acetate. The carbon dioxide will fill up the balloon and the bottle will become cold as the chemical reaction absorbs heat.
salt
Salt dissolves quicker!
An example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat is the reaction between baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) and vinegar (acetic acid) to produce carbon dioxide gas. This reaction is endothermic, meaning it absorbs heat from its surroundings, causing the mixture to feel cold to the touch.
It dissolves in both cold and warm.
If you put salt in warm or cold water it dissolves better and faster than baking soda.
if you add baking soda to warm or cold water it will dissolve better and faster than salt!
You can wash it off with ice cold water and then put on a baking soda paste to relieve the itching. If you have many bites, take a dose of benedryl to stop the reaction. Other people use white vinegar on the bite or benedryl cream.