Glow sticks are sorta poisonous, so the baby would be poisoned and would need to get help for it right away.
it will need a vet right away or its on death road
When you snap a glow stick, a glass vial containing hydrogen peroxide inside the stick breaks, allowing it to mix with a solution containing phenyl oxalate ester and fluorescent dye. This chemical reaction produces light, causing the glow stick to illuminate in the dark.
When you break a glow stick, a glass vial inside the stick containing hydrogen peroxide is broken, mixing with a solution containing a fluorescent dye. This causes a chemical reaction that produces light through a process called chemiluminescence, making the glow stick glow.
It's a chemical change--there's a glass ampule in the glow stick. and it's got one chemical in it. Around it is another chemical. When you break the glow stick the two chemicals mix, and the glow happens.
prepare to die.
The glow stick in the cold water will not glow as bright as the glow stick in the hot water because when you cool the glow stick down, the chemical process will slow down. The glow stick in the hot water will glow brighter but for a shorter period of time.
Nothing happens, just wash it off rite away.
Ingesting glow stick chemicals can be harmful to pets and humans. The chemicals inside glow sticks are typically not intended for consumption, and if ingested, they can cause irritation, vomiting, and other adverse health effects. It is important to keep glow sticks out of reach of pets and small children to prevent accidental ingestion.
The person who invented the glow stick is Thomas Edison
The substance that makes a glow stick glow is called a chemical dye or phosphor. This substance is contained within the plastic tube of the glow stick and reacts with other chemicals inside the stick to produce the glowing effect when activated.
the glow stick is in the well ☺♥
you get the glow stick in the left hand side of the corner in the tunnel