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The Science of It: Boo Bubbles Marquise Meda learns the science behind bubbling cauldrons at the Orlando Science Center ...
Bubbles spill from the center of the Milky Way, seen in both gamma rays (red) and X-rays (blue). The newly found X-ray bubbles are even bigger than the previously known gamma-ray bubbles.
Explore the fascinating science of champagne, from its creation to the unique bubble patterns it forms in your glass.
The eROSITA X-ray telescope just revealed two strange bubbles of X-ray energy, sitting smack-dab inside the Fermi Bubbles.
Scientists have discovered X-ray bubbles in the center of the Milky Way, which may be the result of thousands of ancient supernovae.
Researchers have created bubbles that can last more than a year before popping. These “everlasting” bubbles (one shown, with a radius of about 3.7 millimeters) get their stamina from glycerol ...
The science behind bubbles in champagne is an active field of research. Here, a red spotlight highlights bubbles growing at the bottom of a goblet, where they stick thanks to surface tension.
At first, that frothy stream of carbonation seems endless. But just how many bubbles can emerge from a glass of beer before it goes flat? Gérard Liger-Belair, a professor of chemical physics at ...