 Welcome back to Kids Fun Science. My name is Ken and today's experiment is peeps experiments. So I'm going to do three different experiments today and I hope you enjoy. Please remember to like and subscribe if you like these experiments and thanks for watching. So our first experiment is going to be microwaving the peeps. So basically peeps are made of marshmallows, air and some sugar coated candy on the outside. So we're going to mark the peeps on parchment paper, wax paper to be able to see the size. Then we're going to put it in the microwave and we're only going to do it for 15 seconds and then we're going to see how much it expands with the microwave as it goes and it's very hard to see through here but you can see it's starting to get bigger through a little bit through the screen there on the microwave and I will open it up a second and it did increase its size quite some. It got a little bit big there as you can see. So the final results pulling it off the parchment paper you can see it probably at least did three times the size by putting it in the microwave for 15 seconds. So not bad and a fun experiment watch out it is very hot so use adult supervision. So for the second peeps experiment we're just using the peeps on a white plate and we're putting warm water in the middle of it just like what you do with Skittles experiment. The peeps are the same way they have a sugar coated color on the outside of it and you can see with the warm water and this is in fast motion so it is sped up a little bit but I love the way the colors stay separated just like the Skittles and forms a really bright vibrant design in there which I thought was pretty cool. And the best thing about this just like the Skittles is you after you're done is to have a peeps treat it tastes a little little wet but it's so good. I love science. All right so for the last experiment I have a bowl of water and the question is when we drop a peeps candy which is marshmallow with sugar around it in water will it float and so we're probably most of you probably predict it's going to float so let's see we put it in it's turned on the side doesn't really matter and it floats right but the question is do all peeps candies float right and after time does the water soak into it will it sink but if you take a peeps candy and because it's full of air because it's a marshmallow and we squeeze it to get the air out will it sink so I'm not doing anything besides taking the air out of it and let's see if it'll sink nope still floats and even though it's on the surface I think most of the air out it is still floating. So I'm going to give it one more try so I've got it on a plate here and I'm pressing down super hard on it to squeeze all the air out you will hear it crackle because you will hear the air escaping from the marshmallow itself I put a little flour or Pam on my hand so the marshmallow doesn't stick to your hands and also on the plate once you get it super flat you feel like you got all the air in then you can roll it into a ball to condense it down so you get that weight into it to make sure all the air escapes and then we will give it a final test so I hope this works all right so after flattening it out over on the counter and then rolling into a ball hopefully now we're able to sink the peep by taking all the air out of it and be able to beat the challenge and to be able to make a peep sink so here we go we're finally able to make the peeps sink there's a lot of air on those marshmallows and so it was a little bit of trial and error and we finally was able to do that so if you liked this video these experiments please click thumbs up and to subscribe and thanks for watching