FINALLY PLEASANT FOR SOME FAMILY TIME OUTDOORS IN TODAY’S SCIENCE ALICIA AND THE ORLANDO SCIENCE CENTER SHOWING US A FUN ACTIVITY. YOU CAN DO TOGETHER INVOLVING BUBBLES. HELLO EVERYONE AND WELCOME TO ...
STORY HERE THIS MONTH, THE SPOOKY SCIENCE AT THE ORLANDO SCIENCE CENTER. ALL MONTH LONG, THERE ARE EXPERIMENTS HAPPENING INSPIRED BY THINGS PEOPLE TEND TO ASSOCIATE WITH HALLOWEEN. TODAY’S EXPERIMENT ...
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 ...
Hovering blue flames that flicker over bogs and marshes have inspired ghostly folktales for centuries. Known as “will-o’-the-wisp,” “jack-o’-lantern,” “corpse candle” and “ignis fatuus” (“foolish fire ...
Champagne is a very fancy drink, and part of what makes it so fancy is the way that it bubbles so elegantly. For decades scientists have wondered why the drink bubbles the way it does, those bubbles ...
Ahead of National Science Day, students can try five simple home experiments. Using easily available materials, students can practise safely at home and confidently present these engaging science ...
ere are some scientific findings worthy of a toast: Researchers have explained why bubbles in Champagne fizz up in a straight line while bubbles in other carbonated drinks, like beer or soda, don’t.
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 ...