👉 Watch the video of Sarah’s school science experiment here! Hello parents, teachers and students! If you’re looking for a fizzy, fun experiment, look no further! Making these baby oil lava lamps ...
Want to turn on, tune in, and drop out? The lava lamp is your go-to device. Hailing from the same era as the famous Timothy Leary quote, this hippy, trippy lamp, with its slowly undulating globules, ...
The ferrofluid lava lamp combines classic ambient lighting with magnetic fluid dynamics - inside the glass, a dark, magnetically-responsive liquid forms animated spikes and shapes when you bring ...
Create your own lava lamp with a few materials from the kitchen. STEP 1: Fill the plastic bottle three-quarters of the way full with vegetable oil. STEP 2: Fill the plastic bottle the rest of the way ...
Science Siblings Paige and Adam Jacobson are giving us a new science experiment to do over winter break, make a homemade lava lamp. First you’ll take your baking soda and pour it in the bottom of your ...
Chief Meteorologist Mark Dixon checks out the densities of different gases in Feb. 9's Science Sunday.
Chief meteorologist Mark Dixon checks out a new interactive exhibit in the Connecticut Science Center's Forces in Motion area. Chief meteorologist Mark Dixon learns how to pop a balloon with an orange ...
Hello parents, teachers and students! If you’re looking for a fizzy, fun experiment, look no further! Making these baby oil lava lamps will teach your students about mixtures, solutions, and density.
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