ALTOONA, Pa. (WTAJ) — An experiment has been floating around the internet showing the importance of washing your hands with soap. Here’s why it works. This experiment can be done at home with simple ...
WEST MICHIGAN — Two things that we might have at home right now is a bar of soap and a microwave. When put together, those two items can help us understand Charles Law and how thunderstorms form.
It can be difficult to teach kids why washing their hands is important, but with this simple experiment, they can have fun learning. Since soap molecules are made of hydrophobic (repels water) and ...
Because of the high volume of air whipped into a bar of ivory soap, when the bar is heated in the microwave, it expands rapidly into a huge, fluffy cloud in just seconds. Try it for yourself! Remember ...
Discover how surface tension keeps water molecules together and how soap can break this force. Watch as pepper flees from soap in water, demonstrating molecular interactions in an exciting way. Watch ...
* It is very important to use Ivory soap in this experiment as the air pockets are the key to having a successful experiment!
In March, while scrolling through TikTok for classroom inspiration, Miami pre-K teacher Amanda Lorenzo discovered a perfectly simple science experiment for the coronavirus age. Prior to the pandemic’s ...
It took a YouTube video, a walk-in freezer kept at negative 20 degrees Celsius, and some very cold-tolerant engineering students for researchers to finally figure out why freezing soap bubbles ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. ALTOONA, Pa. (WTAJ) — An experiment has been ...
ALTOONA, Pa. (WTAJ) — An experiment has been floating around the internet showing the importance of washing your hands with soap. Here’s why it works. This experiment can be done at home with simple ...