Get ready for some explosive fun with our latest science experiment! We've rigged a standard Pringles can with a small charge to see just how much pressure it can take. The big question is: will it ...
Open the bottle of Diet Coke and set in on a surface you don't mind getting wet. Drop as as many Mentos as you can (it helps if you have a funnel) into a 2 L bottle of Coca-Cola... and POW! The ...
Meteorologist Haleigh Vaughn visited Mr. Ablao and Mrs. Salvatore's 6th-grade science classrooms to illustrate this experiment with students. We're calling this one ... exploding lunch bag! You can ...
Watch an exciting chemical reaction between an acid and a base create a volcanic eruption! This classic experiment teaches about chemical reactions, gases, and pressure while creating an impressive ...
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BUFFALO, N.Y. — How do you make your own lava? Dump 10 gallons of basaltic rock into a high-powered induction furnace. Let it heat up for 3 or 4 hours. Stir occasionally with a steel rod. Once the ...
These simple, DIY science experiments for kids will help combat "summer slide" — and your kids will be having so much fun, they won't even notice that their brains are getting a workout. The best part ...
What kid hasn't done the old shake-up-a-soda-bottle-and-watch-it-explode trick? Darryl Baynes takes that natural curiosity in children and runs with it during his "Explosive Science" program, coming ...
WEST MICHIGAN — Two things that we might have at home right now is a bar of soap and a microwave. When put together, those two items can help us understand Charles Law and how thunderstorms form.