they are very thin and the air molecules inside try to expand
Bubbles burst easily because they are made up of thin film. Once they are exposed to the air, the fragile film quickly breaks.
It is not sharpness that bursts bubbles but actually heat and dryness. You can stick a pin right through a bubble and it will not burst, so eventually a bubble will burst due to either temperature of dryness, so if your gonna blow bubbles do it in somewere with moisture in the air and nowhere to hot and it should last longer.
Yes (if you haven't burst all the bubbles).
because the surface strength of the bubble is weak which is proportional to the cohesive force between molecule to molecule in the soap and water solution, assuming u r reffering to the water bubbles,
burst, bubbles, bang, bell, bean, best, bone, bite, boot
It is water droplets expelled into the air as the CO2 bubbles burst in their first rush.
i can hold both of then so easly
The anti-bumbing granules provide many places where bubbles of gas may form as the water boils . The bubbles are small and rise steadily to the surface of the liquid where they burst. Without the granules, fewer but larger bubbles form . they rise and burst with such force that they shake the test tubes which can be very hazardous.
So they can easly run at their prey.
Mike easly is a representative, not a senator.
When the substance is too hot it causes air bubbles or moisture pockets to burst and it splatters.
Think about this a moment. If a bubble burst in water, what would happen to the gas inside? It's got to go somewhere. You might think "Well, it could turn into a lot of smaller bubbles" but that's not likely because of the way surface tension works. For a given volume of gas, one big bubble is much more thermodynamically stable than many small bubbles.