Convection Currents with Ice Cubes Experiment (Convection currents demonstration and experiments)

Convection Currents with Ice Cubes Experiment (Convection currents demonstration and experiments) Made for parents and teachers Science Kits and more https://elementarysciencen.wixsite.co... Plastic tank https://amzn.to/2TdioI1 Small plastic container https://amzn.to/2AC0sR8 Food Coloring https://amzn.to/2TeF0rF My Filming equipment: Cell Phone Tripod 54 inch Travel Tripod with Bluetooth Remote - https://amzn.to/34REzbB Blue Yeti USB Microphone - https://amzn.to/3ePJwGu Green screen & lights - https://amzn.to/2XT9Yc1 Apple iMac 21.5in 2.7GHz Core i5 8GB memory - https://amzn.to/34ZMIe7 iPhone 8 - https://amzn.to/3byn4zw iMovie for editing (on Mac) Convection Currents with Ice Cubes Experiment (Convection currents demonstration and experiments) Chapters 0:09 What you need 0:17 The experiment Convection Currents -The container is filled with room temperature water that I left over night in the container. I use a blue colored ice cube to resemble cold air and Red hot water to how resemble warm air. Genius! You can see the cold blue ice cube immediately starts sinking to the bottom. The red warm water rises throws the top and the cold blue ice cubes sinks. Same goes for air! Convection currents happen within the Earth's magma, water and air. It can happen in anything that is not solid and has parts that are cooler or warmer than other parts A classic example of a convection current would be that of warm air rising towards the ceiling in a house. That’s why it’s always hotter upstairs. This happens because warm air is less dense than colder air. Wind is another example of a convection current. Wind is caused when sunlight that heats air, causing it to displace cooler air. Convection currents in the ocean Ocean currents are caused by differences in water density and temperature in different parts of the ocean. #ConvectionCurrents #ConvectionCurrentswithIceCubesExperiment #convectioncurrentsexperiment