Make Antibubbles
Friday November 28, 2008

Antibubbles are globules of liquid that are surrounded by a thin film of gas. They are a common occurrence, but you may not have noticed them. Antibubbles can either skitter across the surface of a liquid or they can be submerged under liquid. Antibubbles appear bright because they refract light back toward its source, similar to how water droplets in a rainbow refract light.
There are a couple of ways you can make and observe antibubbles yourself. One method is to drip water from a faucet into a container of water to which a couple of drops of soap have been added. The soap lowers the surface tension of the water so the film of air surrounding the dripping water can persist long enough to see the antibubbles.
You can make antibubbles that last longer by using the following procedure:
- Pour a couple of teaspoons of sugar into a glass of soapy water. Do not stir the sugar. Give it a few minutes to dissolve. You want a dense layer of sugar at the bottom of the glass.
- Use a drinking straw to drip a sugar solution into this glass. The droplets will form antibubbles that will sink toward the bottom of the glass. Though the antibubbles will pop if they touch the sides of the container, they will rest on top of the sugar layer at the bottom of the glass and may last for several minutes.


Comments
I am a vet tech and have seen these kinds of bubbles under a microscope quite frequently looking at a fecal float sample. The technique uses a salt solution to make the liquid less dense.
you look at fecal float?
barbie is back! in english, fecal float is poop.