These halloween balloons are more than just cute decorations, they’re powered by SCIENCE! This video stitch (@mrs.b.tv) shows how a fizzy chemical reaction between baking soda and vinegar creates carbon dioxide gas that blows up the balloon! #258stemfacts
#Remix #SpookyScience #STEMFun #balloons
ID: This is a remix reel from @mrs.b.tv. Scott is wearing a black button up shirt in front of the existing video that experiments with baking soda and vinegar inside a bottle with a balloon. The closing video shows white background with red text: Now you know. Blue text: Enjoyed this video? Black text: Please consider donating; your support will help keep our content & resources FREE! Green button with black text: atomichands.com/donate. Image of an iPhone with Atomic Hands’ menu webpage shows with menu options: ASL STEM Storybooks, ASL STEM Videos, ASL STEM Resources, ASL STEM Dictionaries, ASL STEM News, ASL STEM Events, and Deaf STEMist Network.
Transcript: Spooky balloons! This is the cutest and easiest spooky science activity. Add a cup of vinegar to a bottle. Then mix in some food coloring. Next, funnel one to two tablespoons of baking soda into a balloon. I found these skeleton and jack-o-lantern balloons on amazon, they’re in my storefront. Once the baking soda is inside, put the balloon around the rim of the bottle. Finally, lift the balloon up and watch what happens. When the baking soda drops down and mixes with the vinegar, a chemical reaction occurs which creates carbon dioxide gas. That gas rises up and fills the balloon. You can play around with this. Change your bottle size, add more or less baking soda and vinegar, and see how it affects your balloon.