With water, dish soap, sugar, and optional sparkles, you can make your own bubbles. Paige and Adam Jacobson, the science siblings, like to rub some of that dish soap on a flat surface and then use a ...
TULSA, Okla. — Rainbows occur in nature as sunlight is refracted off raindrops, which creates an arc in the sky. There are other ways to experience and create a rainbow, which we did at Discovery Lab ...
It seems Steven Soderbergh is a filmmaker who never will forget his indie roots. The Academy Award-winning director of “Traffic,” “Erin Brockovich” and “Ocean’s Eleven” is back with his latest ...
Some local kids probably wish all of their science classes could be as fun as the one they had Wednesday in Easton. Some local kids probably wish all of their science classes could be as fun as the ...
1. Mix all the ingredients together. 2. Soak your hand in the bubble mixture. 3. Curl your fingers to make an O shape. Soap bubbles are hollow balls of soapy water filled with air. A thin wall of soap ...
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Here are some scientific findings worthy of a toast: Researchers from Brown University and the University of Toulouse in France have explained why bubbles in ...
Champagne is supposed to be bubbly. So is a foaming bath. But a mixture designed to mimic the frigid lakes on an alien moon? That's a little more surprising. Especially when those bubbles come out of ...
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 ...