Liquid Marbles Experiment

The experiment demonstrated that liquid marbles elasticity gained through the liquid meniscus formed between the shell s particles allows a compression up to 30 from the drop s initial dimension.
Liquid marbles experiment. In other words they vanish like magic. Now ask them for their hypothesis for which marble will take the longest to sink the bottom. It is assumed that liquid marbles. Now it s time to race.
If you want to save and reuse the liquids you use from the activity make sure you thoroughly wash your marbles and drinking glasses with soap and water then dry them completely. Ask the kids to each take a marble and hold it over the opening of one of the liquids. The more viscous or thick a liquid is the longer it will take for an object to move through the liquid. If you kept all of your marbles and containers clean throughout the experiment and avoided cross contamination of liquids you may be able to store them for regular use.
The jelly marbles become invisible due to an identical index of refraction with the liquid. Liquid marble s progressive deformation determined by increasing compression forces. In our experiment the marbles took longer to sink when dropped into the jars filled with corn syrup and honey than they did when dropped into the jars filled with water and cooking oil.