Why, while initially washing hands with soap, there are a lot of soap bubbles, but in continuous rubbing if hands, the soap bubbles seem to disappear?

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Why, while initially washing hands with soap, there are a lot of soap bubbles, but in continuous rubbing if hands, the soap bubbles seem to disappear?

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3 Answers

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Soap bubbles form because of something called surface tension. Surface tension is caused by the molecules on the surface of a liquid sticking together. When you first put soap on your hands, the water molecules and soap molecules are mixed together and the surface tension is strong. However, as you rub your hands together, the soap molecules start to push the water molecules away. This makes it harder for the surface tension to hold the molecules together, so the bubbles start to disappear.

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0 views

Why, while initially washing hands with soap, there are a lot of soap bubbles, but in continuous rubbing if hands, the soap bubbles seem to disappear?

In: 0

3 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Soap bubbles form because of something called surface tension. Surface tension is caused by the molecules on the surface of a liquid sticking together. When you first put soap on your hands, the water molecules and soap molecules are mixed together and the surface tension is strong. However, as you rub your hands together, the soap molecules start to push the water molecules away. This makes it harder for the surface tension to hold the molecules together, so the bubbles start to disappear.

You are viewing 1 out of 3 answers, click here to view all answers.