3 Easy Science Experiments You Can Try at Home!

 

๐Ÿงช 3 Easy Science Experiments You Can Try at Home! ๐Ÿ”ฌ✨

No lab coat needed – just curiosity and a few kitchen items! – by StudiesSprouts

Learning science is super fun when you can see it happen in real life! These experiments are safe, simple, and can be done with things already in your house.


๐Ÿงฒ 1. Dancing Raisins Experiment

Watch your raisins groove and move without music! ๐ŸŽถ

You’ll Need:

  • 1 glass of clear soda (like Sprite or 7UP)

  • A few raisins

Steps:

  1. Pour the soda into a glass.

  2. Drop in the raisins.

  3. Watch them sink… then float… then sink again!

Science Behind It: Bubbles of carbon dioxide stick to the raisins, lifting them up. When the bubbles pop at the surface, the raisins sink again. It’s a fun way to learn about gas and buoyancy!


๐ŸŒˆ 2. Magic Milk Color Explosion

Turn your plate into a rainbow with just milk and dish soap!

You’ll Need:

  • A shallow plate

  • Full cream milk

  • Food coloring (any color)

  • Dish soap

  • Cotton bud (or earbud)

Steps:

  1. Pour milk into the plate.

  2. Add a few drops of food coloring in different spots.

  3. Dip the cotton bud in dish soap and gently touch the milk surface.

Watch the color explosion! ๐Ÿ’ฅ

Science Behind It: Soap breaks the surface tension and reacts with fat in the milk, causing the colors to swirl and dance.


๐Ÿ’จ 3. Balloon Blow-Up Without Blowing!

Blow up a balloon using vinegar and baking soda!

You’ll Need:

  • 1 balloon

  • 1 empty plastic bottle

  • Vinegar

  • Baking soda

  • Funnel or paper cone

Steps:

  1. Pour vinegar into the bottle (about 1/4 full).

  2. Put some baking soda into the balloon using a funnel.

  3. Stretch the balloon over the bottle’s mouth without letting the soda fall in.

  4. Now lift the balloon and let the soda drop into the vinegar. Watch the balloon inflate!

Science Behind It: Baking soda + vinegar = carbon dioxide gas, which fills the balloon. It’s a fizzy chemistry show!


๐Ÿง  Sprout Challenge:

Try one experiment each weekend. Record what you observe.
Write one fun line about what you learned and draw a picture of your result. ๐Ÿ“๐ŸŽจ

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