Carbon dioxide is forced into the liquid at high pressure, causing some of it to dissolve (actually, even at normal pressures some carbon dioxide will dissolve in water, but using higher pressure makes more of it dissolve).
i think it will be coke b/c it has bubbles in it
It could also be the small bits of coke flying away from the exploding bubbles.
There are around 1.7-2.0 grams of carbon dioxide in a can of Coke, which would produce around 14,500-16,500 bubbles when released. The exact number of bubbles can vary based on factors like temperature and pressure.
The can itself is a solid. The drink inside is a liquid with gas bubbles dissolved in it.
Oils on your hand reduce the surface tension causing the bubbles to pop
That's the outbreak of carbon dioxide gas bubbles.
it gets alot of bubbles on it and the coke starts to fizz
Boris Beebleford the bubbly can of Coke. soda champaigne soap bubble bath
Loads of bubbles fizz up and cause a eruption.
Heterogeneous mixture
as the fizzy contains co2 which can produces millions of bubbles and the wall of the glass is something rough or contains some dust or dry particles, so when we put some cold drinks like fizzy in a glass due to surface tension of the water molecule it form some bubbles in the wall of the glass.
i think that it is the carbon dioxide gas that is in the coke bottle It can be the metos making the bottle fill up with bubbles and the pressure is too much and it explodes.