Yes. The "fizz" depends on how much the factory makes it with. Color does not effect fizz.
Neither. They both have the same amount of CO2 in them, the industry standard.
no
A person may have eyes that see different colors due to a condition called heterochromia, which is caused by variations in the amount or distribution of pigment in the iris. This can result in one eye being a different color from the other, or different colors appearing within the same eye.
Pepsi is the one that has the most fizz.
A homograph is a word that is spelled the same as another word but has a different meaning and sometimes a different pronunciation. In this case, "does" is a homograph because it can refer to the plural form of the verb "do" or to female deer. "Fizz" is not a homograph in this pair because it does not have another meaning or pronunciation that would make it a homograph with "does."
Effervescence
3
For the same reason that dogs are one species but many different colors.
No
No, different materials have different specific heat capacities, which refers to the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of a unit mass of that material by one degree Celsius. So, the same amount of different materials would not need the same amount of heat to achieve the same change in temperature.
These sodas have the same amount of carbonation, so each produces an equal amount of fizz as the other. when you pour soda and diet they will have the same amount because of the carbonation inside of it you are right but they could try it out for there sefl you know
No as different colours of light(that is different wavelengths) move through glass at different speeds they bend when entering and exiting the prism by different amount causing a dispersion of the light into different wavelengths.