Bottle fountain science activity Follow FizzicsEd 150 Science Experiments: Comments 2 You will need: 1 soda bottle Water 1 funnel 1 balloon Blu Tack 1 straw with a bend in it 1 tray to catch excess water Optional: blue food colouring A boxcutter (with adult help) Written by Fizzics Education. Reviewed by Ben Newsome CF. Cite this experiment Copyright Notice Instruction 1 With adult help, carefully make a small hole in the side of the plastic bottle with the boxcutter. 2 It can be worth cutting away some of the plastic completely rather than making an ‘X’ shape, this will allow the straw to sit easily in the hole. 3 Seal around the straw with Blu Tack or modelling clay. make sure that the bottle is dry here or the Blu Tack won’t stick as well. Keep the star pointed upwards. 4 Optional: add some food colouring to your water 5 Add the funnel to your bottle and carefully pour your water into the bottle. You’ll notice that water will rise up through the straw to the same height as the water inside the bottle. This is due to equal air pressure pushing downwards through the opening of the straw and the bottle. 6 Blow up a balloon and pinch the opening tightly. Carefully stretch the opening of the balloon over the mouth of the bottle without letting go of the neck of the balloon. 7 Quickly release the balloon and watch the fountain stream out! 8 The water will continue to stream outwards as long as both the end of the straw is in the water inside the bottle and that the balloon continues to push air into the bottle. 9 Get the Unit of Work on Pressure here! Want to dive into air pressure? It’s all about air pressure in many ways! From how storms form to how planes fly, this unit covers many concepts about air pressure. Includes cross-curricular teaching ideas, student quizzes, a sample marking rubric, scope & sequences & more 10 School science visits since 2004! – Curriculum-linked & award-winning incursions. – Over 40 primary & high school programs to choose from. – Designed by experienced educators. – Over 2 million students reached. – Face to face incursions & online programs available. – Early learning centre visits too! 11 Online courses for teachers & parents – Help students learn how science really works Why Does This Happen? The Science of the Bottle Fountain This experiment is all about air pressure! When the bottle was open, the atmospheric pressure pushing down into the neck of the bottle and the straw opening was exactly the same. This is why the water level remained at the same height in both the bottle and the straw, even if you filled it past the straw’s internal opening. By adding an inflated balloon and releasing the air into the bottle, you created a significant pressure differential. The balloon’s elastic skin squeezes the air inside, increasing its pneumatic pressure. When this high-pressure air enters the sealed bottle, it pushes down on the surface of the water. Because the water is practically incompressible and has nowhere else to go, it is forced up through the straw and out into the air. The water continues to stream out until the air pressure inside the bottle drops back down to match the air pressure outside. Variables to test Find out more on variables here. Orientation What happens when you turn the straw upside down? Try this when the water level is above the straw opening height. Does gravity change the result? Potential Energy Would the stream of water be a different length with a larger or smaller balloon? Does more air volume equal more pressure? Atmospheric Conditions What would happen if this was done on a mountaintop (low altitude) vs sea level (high altitude)? Friction and Flow Try adding a curly-shaped straw. Does the extra surface friction inside the straw slow down the fountain? Distribution What would happen if you had two or three straws attached? Does the water pressure divide equally between them? âś… Reviewed: April 6, 2026 APA 7 Citation: Fizzics Education. (2020). Ocean in a bottle activity. https://www.fizzicseducation.com.au/150-science-experiments/water-science-activities/ocean-in-a-bottle-activity/ Copy APA Citation Reviewer This resource was last reviewed for scientific accuracy on April 6, 2026. Ben Newsome CF is the recipient of the 2023 UTS Chancellor’s Award for Excellence and a Churchill Fellow. He is a global leader in science communication and the founder of Fizzics Education. Learn more! Teaching about air pressure? Check out the Flight or Weather show! Teaching about Newton’s laws? Check out the Forces, Friction & Movement workshop! Get in touch with FizzicsEd to find out how we can work with your class. Learn more about air pressure! Get the 60-minute video + PDFs + curriculum links for your class here! Working with Water Years K to 2 Maximum 30 students School workshop (NSW & VIC) 60 or 90 minutes Online Class Available Read More Enquire Now STEM Full Day Accelerator - Primary Designed from real classroom experiences, this modular day helps you create consistently effective science learning that directly address the new curriculum with easily accessible and cost-effective materials. Read More Enquire Now Sale! Balloon Helicopter $4.35 Original price was: $4.35.$3.95Current price is: $3.95. excl. GST View Details Add to Cart Trustpilot Budding Scientist Party Designed for younger kids Hands on science experiments Slime making Professional science show From $395 inc. GST Read More
It can be worth cutting away some of the plastic completely rather than making an ‘X’ shape, this will allow the straw to sit easily in the hole.
Seal around the straw with Blu Tack or modelling clay. make sure that the bottle is dry here or the Blu Tack won’t stick as well. Keep the star pointed upwards.
Add the funnel to your bottle and carefully pour your water into the bottle. You’ll notice that water will rise up through the straw to the same height as the water inside the bottle. This is due to equal air pressure pushing downwards through the opening of the straw and the bottle.
Blow up a balloon and pinch the opening tightly. Carefully stretch the opening of the balloon over the mouth of the bottle without letting go of the neck of the balloon.
The water will continue to stream outwards as long as both the end of the straw is in the water inside the bottle and that the balloon continues to push air into the bottle.
Get the Unit of Work on Pressure here! Want to dive into air pressure? It’s all about air pressure in many ways! From how storms form to how planes fly, this unit covers many concepts about air pressure. Includes cross-curricular teaching ideas, student quizzes, a sample marking rubric, scope & sequences & more
School science visits since 2004! – Curriculum-linked & award-winning incursions. – Over 40 primary & high school programs to choose from. – Designed by experienced educators. – Over 2 million students reached. – Face to face incursions & online programs available. – Early learning centre visits too!
Teaching about air pressure? Check out the Flight or Weather show! Teaching about Newton’s laws? Check out the Forces, Friction & Movement workshop! Get in touch with FizzicsEd to find out how we can work with your class. Learn more about air pressure! Get the 60-minute video + PDFs + curriculum links for your class here!
Working with Water Years K to 2 Maximum 30 students School workshop (NSW & VIC) 60 or 90 minutes Online Class Available Read More Enquire Now
STEM Full Day Accelerator - Primary Designed from real classroom experiences, this modular day helps you create consistently effective science learning that directly address the new curriculum with easily accessible and cost-effective materials. Read More Enquire Now
Designed from real classroom experiences, this modular day helps you create consistently effective science learning that directly address the new curriculum with easily accessible and cost-effective materials.
Sale! Balloon Helicopter $4.35 Original price was: $4.35.$3.95Current price is: $3.95. excl. GST View Details Add to Cart Trustpilot
Budding Scientist Party Designed for younger kids Hands on science experiments Slime making Professional science show From $395 inc. GST Read More
Designed for younger kids Hands on science experiments Slime making Professional science show From $395 inc. GST
This website uses cookies to improve user experience. By using our website you consent to all cookies in accordance with our Cookie Policy.
Thank you for looking to subscribing to our newsletter 🙂 Through this service you’ll be first to know about the newest free experiments, science news and special offers. PLUS: Get a free Kitchen Chemistry Booklet with >20 experiments, how to use variables plus a handy template!
Please fill out the details below and an email will be sent to you. Once you get that just click on the link to confirm your subscription and you're all done!