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The real reason champagne has bubbles (and it wasn't meant for celebrations)
The Accidental Discovery Nobody Wanted Back in the 17th century sparkling wine was looked down upon, and the French monk who is believed to have first discovered champagne, Dom Pierre Perignon, was ...
Champagne is a very fancy drink, and part of what makes it so fancy is the way that it bubbles so elegantly. For decades scientists have wondered why the drink bubbles the way it does, those bubbles ...
Unusual Valentine’s & Galentine’s bubbles—from pét-nat and sparkling red to luxe bath “champagne”, lux kombucha and NA ...
Brown University physicist Roberto Zenit has a knack for tying his fundamental fluid dynamics research to everyday phenomena, like enjoying a glass of champagne with friends. He noticed one day that ...
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Here are some scientific findings worthy of a toast: Researchers from Brown University and the University of Toulouse in France have explained why bubbles in ...
Raise a glass to this scientific breakthrough. Researchers at Brown University — who were working in tandem with peers at the University of Toulouse in France — have finally discovered why Champagne ...
Have you ever gazed into your Champagne flute at a party and been mesmerized by the endless, uniform march of bubbles rising up from the base of the glass? If so, you share that experience with an ...
PROVIDENCE — Have you ever noticed how the bubbles in champagne stream in straight lines to the top of a flute glass? Or how that differs from bubbles in other carbonated beverages — like beer, soda, ...
In a lab in the heart of France’s wine country, a group of researchers carefully positions an ultra-high-speed camera. Like many good scientists, they are devoted to the practice of unpicking the ...
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