Here’s an easy experiment with pepper and soap that allows you to see surface tension – and its destruction. Photo by John Bush, Tristan Gilet/MIT. Shake some pepper, carefully, into a cup of water.
Water has very unique properties, and this experiment puts them to the test! Follow along with ABC11 Science Club with BASF and discover how to measure surface tension using a simple penny! Objective: ...
It's that time of year when your kids might be getting a little restless spending so much time inside. If your kids are starting to get the winter blues, we have some ideas to cheer them up. Why not ...
SAN ANTONIO – Want to keep your kids learning this summer? Here are three fun and easy experiments to explore surface tension with your kids at home with a little help from Andrea Cook with Mad ...
Trying to sell handwashing as an exciting new childhood hobby? How's that working out? Activities that highlight soap's eye-popping "secret powers" could help. Here are projects that also inject some ...
Let's Dive In is back on RTÉjr Radio with a new series to answer all your science questions. There are ten new episodes dropping every Thursday at 7pm on RTÉjr Radio starting today! Your hosts Julie ...
This viral video posted on Instagram by the International Space Station shows how water shapes itself into spheres when it is in the microgravity of space. It is always interesting to watch ...
HOPING it may be of interest to some of your readers, I venture to send you the following description of a simple experiment on surface tension. A drop of water hanging from the end of a vertical ...