GRAND RAPIDS, Mich — Do you have too much leftover candy corn? Well, this experiment will allow young scientists to develop a hypothesis, execute an experiment, and edit their hypothesis as they work ...
CLEVELAND, Ohio – “Smitten with Science” at the Great Lakes Science Center blends candy, chemistry and creativity into a hands-on Valentine’s season experience designed to show kids that science can ...
Beth Harris, Raleigh science educator, mom and author, is back with a fun holiday science experiments that you can do at home with the kids. And this one gets rid of a little bit of the Halloween ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Today's experi"mint" is all about candy canes! Let's join our friend Michelle Roy, the science coordinator at the Kern County ...
Have you ever helped with cooking and gotten oil on your hands? It’s hard to get off! Rinsing with water does not work; you need to use soap. The reason is the molecules that oil and water are made of ...
In this time-lapse video, mathematicians at New York University immersed a block of blue candy in water and filmed its dissolution. The candy surface sunk unevenly as some areas dissolved faster than ...
1. Label your three cups water, alcohol, and oil. 2. Add 1 tablespoon of water, isopropyl alcohol, and oil to its labeled cup. 3. Take three M&Ms of the same color and put one in each cup. 4. Swirl ...