Is A Bubble A Gas, Liquid, or Solid?

who told you, you won't get arrested if you're caught w/ pure cocaine but will if it's cut lol

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Everybody's premise seems to be that when you pop a bubble it turns into a liquid, therefore a bubble is a liquid.

But when you melt an ice cube it turns into a liquid, so by the same logic an ice cube is a liquid.


Thanks for solving that question fellas
 
Everybody's premise seems to be that when you pop a bubble it turns into a liquid, therefore a bubble is a liquid.

But when you melt an ice cube it turns into a liquid, so by the same logic an ice cube is a liquid.


Thanks for solving that question fellas
No
 
Everybody's premise seems to be that when you pop a bubble it turns into a liquid, therefore a bubble is a liquid.

But when you melt an ice cube it turns into a liquid, so by the same logic an ice cube is a liquid.


Thanks for solving that question fellas

Lol
 
Everybody's premise seems to be that when you pop a bubble it turns into a liquid, therefore a bubble is a liquid.

But when you melt an ice cube it turns into a liquid, so by the same logic an ice cube is a liquid.


Thanks for solving that question fellas

No... first of all you're conflating two things. A bubble is a compound typically made of a liquid and a gas. An ice cube is frozen water. Whether water is frozen or not it's still water but it can be either a solid or a liquid like many elements or compounds.

Are you just dedicated to being wrong? I don't get it. You could either learn something here and become that much smarter or stay dedicated to trying to prove you're right even though you're not. What's your endgame?
 
It’s a liquid in a gaseous form bruh cause u gotta think when u pop a bubble and u feel Lil droplets hit ur face
:think3:
 
No... first of all you're conflating two things. A bubble is a compound typically made of a liquid and a gas. An ice cube is frozen water. Whether water is frozen or not it's still water but it can be either a solid or a liquid like many elements or compounds.

Are you just dedicated to being wrong? I don't get it. You could either learn something here and become that much smarter or stay dedicated to trying to prove you're right even though you're not. What's your endgame?


Your post doesn't even have anything to do with what we're talking about.

You say water is an element and a bubble is a compound, but that's irrelevant.

50% water + 50% dish detergent = soapy water. After I mix it I can put that solution into an ice cube tray and put it in the freezer. When I come back in 2 hours that solution will be completely frozen. It will be a solid. So if water is frozen or liquid is irrelevant to this conversation. If water is a compound or an element is irrelevant to this conversation. What is relevant is whether the soapy water is frozen, liquid, or gas. If I put soapy water in the freezer it will turn into a frozen solid. If I take soapy water out of the freezer and leave it out for a few hours it will be a liquid.

But soapy water being in, or out of the freezer has no bearing on whether or not a bubble that is suspended in mid air is a liquid, gas or solid.

The state of the bubble after you pop it is irrelevant to this conversation, just like the state of an ice cube after it melts is irrelevant to whether or not an ice cube is a gas, liquid or solid.

Bottom line is that a bubble is certainly a compound, I doubt you could get distilled water to form a bubble. Soapy water is a liquid but it can transform into a bubble and float in mid air temporarily. In that temporary moment that the bubble is in mid air it doesn't meet the criteria of a liquid, nor a gas.


@SneakDZA Try again, and if you could make your point without ad hominem attacks your argument will sound more intelligent.
 
This guy trynna add a new discovery and/or exception to Science, but skipping clean over the periodic table and it's definition of laws.
 
Maybe it's plasma, meaning that it's a liquidy gas meaning it flows like a liquid but had no real form like a gas

Definition. Plasma is a state of matter in which an ionized gaseous substance becomes highly electrically conductive to the point that long-range electric and magnetic fields dominate the behaviour of the matter.

Yea that dont sound like a bubble to me
 
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