Well, depending on the type of "Bleach" which is a super relative term anywho, you'll release the active agent. Chlorine bleach, will bond the Cl atoms with Oxygen. Enjoy Chlorine Gas. If its Oxygen based bleach, you'll just pass out. Either way, I wouldn't want to be in the room with you when you tried it.
Electrolysis breaks water into hydrogen and oxygen. When an electric current is passed through water, the water molecules (H2O) are split into hydrogen gas (H2) at the cathode and oxygen gas (O2) at the anode.
When you put a lighted splint in nitrogen, it will continue to burn but more slowly than in oxygen due to the lack of oxygen in nitrogen. Nitrogen is an inert gas that does not support combustion, so the splint will eventually go out.
Lime water turns milky or cloudy when exposed to oxygen. This is due to the formation of calcium carbonate as the lime water reacts with carbon dioxide in the air.
what happens to the ground is it is stripped of its oxygen levels and the water begins to overflow and run off
Combines with oxygen
Nothing would happen. You would just have a mixture of water and oxygen.
When that happens it uses up all the oxygen and replaces it with co2 (carbon dioxide) and water and that what makes the sucking affect :)
The concentration of oxygen decrease.
The concentration of oxygen decrease.
If the match is lit and the bottle is empty, the match will burn all the oxygen and then it will go out, since it requires oxygen to keep burning. If the bottle is full, you will have a wet match.
water is left
When someone is holding their breath, oxygen levels decrease. Heart rate will then increase to try to keep the oxygen flowing.
water
Yes, fire is like us, it needs oxygen to breathe, water has no oxygen molcules, meaning it will put out a fire.
Water stops oxygen from getting to the flame, and oxygen is the fire's food.
Nothing noteworthy happens if mentos are put in tap water; they simply dissolve slowly.
When oxygen is added to lime water (calcium hydroxide solution), it reacts with the calcium hydroxide to form calcium carbonate. This reaction causes the lime water to turn milky due to the formation of calcium carbonate, which is insoluble and settles out of the solution as a solid.