well I think a good question would be, what is in the highlighter that gives off its glow
The answer is a Black light and Tonic Water. Tonic water contains a chemical called quinine which makes it glow bright blue when the water is exposed to black light.You take a bowl and put water or Tonic water just in case you want to drink it.Then you put highlighter ink in the water then stir the ink in the water. It looks kinda weird, but then you put the black light over it and it GLOWS.
A good hypothesis for glow in the dark water could be: "If a luminescent material is added to water, then the water will glow in the dark due to the light emitted by the luminescent material when exposed to darkness."
Highlighter ink does not glow in the dark on its own. To make water glow in the dark, you would need to use a fluorescent or phosphorescent pigment designed for that purpose. These pigments are usually powders that need to be mixed with water in specific quantities and then exposed to light to charge up before they will glow in the dark.
Yes, glow-in-the-dark nails are real. They are created using glow-in-the-dark nail polish, which contains phosphors that emit light when charged with UV light. These nails can glow for several hours in the dark after being exposed to light.
Yes it can be made to glow if you use tonic water. Use half tonic water and half water and our jello will glow!
Actually, im doing this science project in school! I have to say how it glows. The molecular structure in the tonic water (guinine) molecules "excite" the molecules in the Jell-O and makes it glow.
To make glow-in-the-dark icing, use tonic water as a liquid ingredient in your icing recipe. Tonic water contains quinine, which glows under UV light due to fluorescence. Simply substitute the water or other liquid in your recipe with tonic water to create glowing icing that is safe to eat.
Mix tonic water and clear piping gel and brush over your icing. It will glow under a black light.
well I think a good question would be, what is in the highlighter that gives off its glow
hihlighter ,tonic water light
The ingredient in tonic water that makes it taste like tonic water - quinine - is the cause. Because of its molecular structure, it will fluoresce blue in sunlight and positively glow under a black light.
Freezing tonic water can cause it to expand and potentially burst the container due to the carbonation. The taste and carbonation of the tonic water may also be affected, resulting in a flat and less refreshing beverage. It is not recommended to freeze tonic water.
The answer is a Black light and Tonic Water. Tonic water contains a chemical called quinine which makes it glow bright blue when the water is exposed to black light.You take a bowl and put water or Tonic water just in case you want to drink it.Then you put highlighter ink in the water then stir the ink in the water. It looks kinda weird, but then you put the black light over it and it GLOWS.
A good hypothesis for glow in the dark water could be: "If a luminescent material is added to water, then the water will glow in the dark due to the light emitted by the luminescent material when exposed to darkness."
Yes if you hold a black light by it it will glow only real quinine does that
Tonic water does not glow when mixed with green highlighter ink because the quinine in tonic water, responsible for fluorescence under UV light, is not reactive to the wavelength of light emitted by the green highlighter ink. The fluorescent properties of quinine are specific to certain wavelengths of UV light, which the green highlighter ink does not produce.