Description: Close-up view of soap bubbles.
Label Text: In the bath tub, in your hand, or in the laundry machine, bubbles are everywhere. This picture captures that breath-taking moment before bubbles pop—scientifically, when the air pressure inside the bubbles is just a bit higher than the pressure outside. The curvature of the bubble is achieved by surface tension, which tries to pull molecules of water and soap into the tightest possible grouping. When the internal pressure of multiple merging bubbles is exactly equal to one another, the surface tension creates a perfect flat surface between bubbles—seen in the straight lines in this picture. The fragility of bubbles can be interpreted as reflecting the vulnerability of life. When the bubbles of our life pop in this great universe, who will hear it?
-Shion Kubota ’19, Society of Physics Students, Mount Holyoke College (Oct. 2017)
Tags: science; patterns Subjects: patterns (design elements); Science; Photographic gelatin Link to share this object record: https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=MH+1983.21.7 |