This experiment worked out well, my group and I worked well together. It worked very well, It was mostly just following instructions so it wasn't very hard. Below we put dry ice in a beaker of water and bubbles arose and made smoke. Some questions I had was if the gas was co2 or water vapor and Andrew confirmed that it was water vapor. I did not other than when I did the putting dry ice in the balloon to see if it produced gas. I got desirable results, all my curiosities were fulfilled. I conducted the dry ice in water experiment and took mental notes about it. I worked with Garrett, Fehung, and Alex Wessel and we performed well. We were all curious and we worked well together.
I contributed by conducting the dry ice in water experiment and taking mental notes. I would try to use less water in the beaker and less dry ice because we used more than needed. I would choose to work with Garrett because he has a lot of the same curiosities as me. I don't really see a continuation of this experiment and I would like to go further because I am interested in dry ice. On a deeper level I believe that the dry ice goes from solid to gas because of the such low pressure and the temperature of the ice itself, its so cold and not compact that when put to room temperature the molecules go bonkers and fly everywhere. With the dry ice in the balloon experiment I could see that the balloon was inflating, and I researched that dry ice is 1.5 g/ml, then 1 cc is about 1.5 g CO2. So the volume of the gas from the solid is more than what the solid volumes was.