the dish soap breaks down the fat in the milk
it has a chemical that breaks the milk che mical to make the food coloring burst
because soap break down fat in milk
No, mixing Dawn dish soap with food coloring will not result in a chemical reaction. Dawn dish soap is a surfactant that can help spread and dissolve the food coloring in water but it does not lead to any chemical changes in the substances.
it make it expaned by thee ingredents in the dish soup and the surface tension and sulfur.
Well my teacher told me that you just have to talk about the milk, food coloring, or dish soap you use and just explain how you used it.
It is a science experiment on surface tension in liquids, where drops of food coloring are placed into a shallow plateful of milk. The coloring drops (being lighter, water-based liquids) will usually just stay put due to the surface tension of the milk (which is a denser colloid of fat molecules).You can dip a cotton swab in dish soap, then gently touch the swab to the surface near the drops. Or you can drop a drop of soap into the center of the milk.Adding a little soap will break the surface tension of the milk by dissolving some of the fat. When this happens, the moving surface of the milk will disperse the food coloring drops away from the soap, possibly even down into the milk. You can get a spectacular moving color display as the coloring drops break up and fan out.
no
Dish soap is just detergent, meaning it breaks up the fat in milk which makes it move rapid. And the food coloring is just to make it noticeable. Soap breaks down the surface tension of the water molecules in milk.
whole milk lasted the longest
Food coloring doesn't dissolve well in milk because milk is an emulsion of fat and water, and the fat globules create a barrier that prevents the coloring from dispersing uniformly. The fat molecules in milk are hydrophobic, meaning they repel water-based substances like food coloring. As a result, the food coloring tends to remain concentrated in certain areas rather than mixing thoroughly. This phenomenon can lead to interesting visual effects when food coloring is added to milk, as it swirls and creates patterns before eventually settling.
whole milk lasted the longest
In the color changing milk experiment, the dependent variable is the color of the milk (whether it changes or remains the same), which is affected by the independent variable, such as the addition of dish soap or food coloring.