CASCADE, Mich. — Looking for a fun activity to do at home with your kids? This science experiment is fun for all ages and teaches how tornadoes form! Meteorologist Isabella Hulsizer visited third ...
COMSTOCK PARK, Mich. — While we've done the tornado in a bottle weather experiment before, it was appropriate to conduct it at Pine Island Elementary School in Comstock Park, since the school was ...
TULSA, Okla. — In our May edition of Weather Experiment Wednesday, we had Discovery Lab Director of Education Chip Lindsey, show us how we can demonstrate cloud physics in a 2-liter bottle. All you ...
GREENVILLE, S.C. (FOX Carolina) - First Alert Chief Meteorologist Kendra Kent shows kids and parents how to recreate her “Cloud in a bottle” experiment! The demonstration is a great hands-on way to ...
LYNCHBURG, Va. (WSET) — The Science Behind Severe Weather is here and Monday is Day One of experiments. Here is one the whole family can do at home using household objects. This experiment ...
You will need some warm water, a small clean plastic soda bottle, a packet of yeast, 1 tablespoon of sugar, and a small balloon. First, you need to fill the bottle p with bout 1 inch of warm water.
Watch this fascinating demonstration of air pressure at work. Notice how the egg vibrates as the heated air escapes around it, and how it gets smoothly pushed into the bottle by atmospheric pressure.
Trust in a bottle? It sounds like a marketer's fantasy, like the fabled fountain of youth or the wild claims of fad diets. Yet that's what Swiss and American scientists demonstrate in new experiments ...
You will need a 1 liter plastic bottle without any labels, a ketchup pack from a fast food restaurant, and salt. Fill the bottle up with water and then add the pack of ketchup to the bottle. Make sure ...