Submitted by crazunggoy47 t3_y00ioa in askscience
I’m curious, is there a terminal speed of a bubble of air as it rises through the water? And how is it affected by the size of the bubble and the pressure (i.e. depth of the water)? I feel like smaller bubbles rise slower, but I don’t understand why. Surface tension?
Puppy-Zwolle t1_irpci2q wrote
Bubbles are ellipsoidal in shape, motion is irregular, and velocity is independent of bubble diameter (U is approx. 28 - 30 cm/sec) for bubbles having radii up to 0.75 cm. For larger bubbles their velocity tends to increase to 35 - 40 cm/sec, but they are not stable and tend to subdivide into smaller bubbles.
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