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Touchy Bubbles

Touchy Bubbles. Problem. On which surface will a bubble last the longest?. Surfaces we will be testing. Table top Construction Paper Aluminum Tray Plastic Tray Wax Paper. Hypothesis. IF I blow a bubble on different surfaces

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Touchy Bubbles

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  1. Touchy Bubbles

  2. Problem On which surface will a bubble last the longest?

  3. Surfaces we will be testing • Table top • Construction Paper • Aluminum Tray • Plastic Tray • Wax Paper

  4. Hypothesis • IF I blow a bubble on different surfaces • THEN the bubble will last the longest on ________________ surface • BECAUSE _____________________ _______________________________ Choose from Table top, Construction Paper, Aluminum Tray, Plastic Tray, & Wax Paper

  5. Variables • Independent Variable (you change): • Dependent Variable (you measure): Surface Time the bubble lasts in seconds

  6. Materials • 1 cup of bubble mix • 1 desk top • 1 aluminum tray • 1 plastic tray • 1 piece of construction paper • 1 piece of wax paper • 1 bubble wand

  7. Procedure • One person will blow a bubble on the first surface. • As soon as the bubble is complete, another person will start the stopwatch. Click here for an online STOPWATCH to use. • Measure the length of time the bubble lasts in seconds and record on your data chart. • Repeat steps 1-3 two more times for the first surface. • Find the average or mean of the 3 attempts and record. • Repeat steps 1-5 for the rest of the surfaces.

  8. Data Table

  9. Use a ruler and color!

  10. Conclusion • Was your hypothesis supported? Why or why not? Use data to defend your answer. • Identify any possible errors or factors that could have affected the experiment. • Is there anything you would do differently next time? • List at least three other surfaces you could test to see how long a bubble would last.

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