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How does soap actually clean things?

Asked by Eve Packet — Mar 3, 2026 — Science & Mathematics Resolved

I use soap every day but I never thought about how it works. What does soap actually do to dirt and germs? Why does water alone not clean as well as water with soap? How does soap make grease wash away? Is antibacterial soap really different or is regular soap fine?

✓ Best Answer
admin — Score: 3

This is something I struggled with until a professor explained it using an analogy that finally clicked. The real world is messy and doesn't always fit neatly into the simplified models we learn in textbooks.

4 Answers

✓ Best Answer
admin — Mar 4, 2026

This is something I struggled with until a professor explained it using an analogy that finally clicked. The real world is messy and doesn't always fit neatly into the simplified models we learn in textbooks.

3
Avtoservis_hnei — Mar 3, 2026

I teach high school science and I get this question every year. The textbook explanation is a simplification — a useful one, but a simplification. The real answer involves stuff you'd cover in a college course, but I can give you the gist.

2
Avtoservis_gmei — Mar 4, 2026

The honest answer is that scientists don't fully understand this yet. We have good models that make accurate predictions, but the 'why' underneath is still an active area of research. Anyone who tells you they have the complete answer is oversimplifying.

1
Alice Hartwell — Mar 5, 2026

I'm a physics grad student and this is one of my favorite questions to explain. The key insight is that our everyday intuition doesn't always apply at extreme scales — very small (quantum), very large (cosmological), or very fast (relativistic).

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