Bubbles, bubble blowing, bubble solutions, bubble history, bubble fun, bubble games, bubble machines and bubble trivia are found on this website... and you can learn all about Professor Bubbles. ...
By Ron Hipschman. What is so fascinating about bubbles The precise spherical shape, the incredibly fragile nature of the microscopically thin soap film, the beautiful colors that swirl and shimmer, or most likely, a combination of all these phenomena Why does a bubble form a sphere at all Why not a cube, tetrahedron, or other geometrical figure Let's look at the forces that mold bubbles.
www.exploratorium.edu/ronh/bubbles/bubbles.html
Bubble Geometry Have you ever seen a square bubble Experiment with bubbles. Create bubble wands out of found objects (straws, pipe cleaners, strawberry baskets and coathangers) and have your own bubble festival. How can you catch a bubble The secret is the soap solution. Try catching a bubble with a dry hand versus a wet hand. Which lasts longer This activity is included in the Shapes cluster ...
www.sci.mus.mn.us/sln/tf/b/bubblegeometry/bubblegeometry.html
Antibubbles What is an Antibubble An antibubble is the opposite of a bubble. A soap bubble in air is a thin film of liquid surrounding air. An antibubble in liquid is a thin film of air surrounding liquid. Note that an antibubble is different than an ordinary air bubble in liquid. An ordinarry air bubble is simply some air surrounded by liquid. An antibubble has liquid inside and outside. They ...