The gas or air inside a bubble will expand if heated up by the heat of the water and so burst quickly. I would imagine if there is an absence of heat the air inside will not be able to expand, and the bubble will just remain a consistent shape and size. Imagine a hot air balloon where the air inside is expanding and lifting the balloon. You never hear of cold air balloons now do you?
2006-12-18 01:47:23
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answer #1
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answered by celery4me 1
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Gases dissolve better in colder liquids. This is the opposite of solids, which dissolve better in hotter liquids. This phoenomenom is evident with a flat warm soda, compared to a bubbly cold one. Oppositely, one can dissolve more tea in hot liquid than cold.
2006-12-17 21:45:18
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answer #2
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answered by Paul J 2
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Warm water bubbles evaporate faster.
2006-12-17 19:29:35
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answer #3
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answered by luosechi 駱士基 6
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because in hot water the atoms have more energy and they move quickly....in cold water, atoms are slower and they move less making them less bubble-popping!
2006-12-17 17:25:12
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answer #4
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answered by iidibitizi 3
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Is it?U didnt notice that though...
2006-12-17 18:12:26
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answer #5
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answered by syikin_310 2
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