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How do you do the dancing raisins experiment?

How do you do the dancing raisins experiment?

Add one teaspoon of baking soda and stir until it is dissolved in the water. Add 6 or 7 raisins to the glass. SLOWLY pour in vinegar until the glass is about 3/4 full. The vinegar and baking soda react to form carbon dioxide bubbles, and the raisins will dance just as in the soft drink!

How do you make colored water?

Color water with natural powdered food coloring.

  1. Mix paprika into water to color it orange.
  2. Steep saffron or turmeric to get yellow water.
  3. Stir matcha or other powdered green tea into water to turn it green.
  4. Add ground coffee or cocoa powder to water, or steep a tea bag in warm water, to color it brown.

What are some of the best science fair projects?

With this science fair experiment,you can learn what factors affect melting ice.

  • Try this magic milk experiment for an easy science fair project that younger students can accomplish.
  • How much sun does a seed need to sprout?
  • Build your own water clock and see how well you can get it to measure time.
  • What are some good ideas for science fair projects?

    Some good ideas for science fair projects include recording the effects of different foods on the human heart rate, observing the influence of phrasing questions differently on the answers they elicit, paper airplane engineering, coin toss probabilities and an investigation of platonic solids. Science fair projects can be conducted within virtually any branch of science, including biology

    How to create a science fair project?

    Make a hypothesis. A hypothesis is a testable statement about a scientific process and the way it works that is made based on a researched topic.

  • Design your experiment. Once you have chosen a topic and made a hypothesis,you need to design an experiment that will properly test that hypothesis.
  • Write a procedure.
  • Gather the necessary materials.
  • What to include in a science fair project?

    Name of the presenter

  • Picture of the presenter
  • Captions mentioning the source of every picture or image
  • Laboratory notes
  • Information snippets
  • Experimental data and statistics