French painters Jean Siméon Chardin and Édouard Manet both created well-known paintings that depicted children blowing bubbles through straw-like tubes, albeit painted more than a century apart. Those ...
With water, dish soap, sugar, and optional sparkles, you can make your own bubbles. Paige and Adam Jacobson, the science siblings, like to rub some of that dish soap on a flat surface and then use a ...
While the cold weather may deter many from going outside, others like to take advantage of the freezing temperatures and test out different science experiments. From blowing frozen bubbles to throwing ...
At first glance, the soap foam appears to be quite simple: it is light, airy, and most often white. However, there is a great deal going on behind the scenes, with many tiny bubbles and a great amount ...
Cold winter weather can lead to amazing spectacles, such as pancake ice on frozen lakes and thunderous frost quakes amid a frigid landscape, but one picturesque scene requires some human intervention.
Two touching or “kissing” soap bubbles can detach, slide along each other sideways or shift to the side when they are pushed together or pulled apart. You never see a soap bubble form in the shape of ...