It's best not to, as thermometers can be quite fragile. A glass rod is preferable. (That said, you can get so-called stirring rod thermometers, made to be more robust, but they tend not to be very accurate and are really only meant for lower grade chemistry.)
No, because the thermometer can break.
Taste is what sense you should never use in a laboratory
I believe you are talking about for a reaction vessel (round bottom flask). It allows the thermometer to be very close to the reaction without being in the vessel. It can be used in cases where you cannot have oxygen getting into the system or if the products may break the thermometer or stick to it etc
Yes it is possible to use laboratory in a sentence, laboratory is a perfectly respectable English noun.
it is alcohol to disinfect the thermometer
u can
stirring rod
to analyzetemperature readings.
Measuring temperatures, i would guess.
Measuring temperatures, i would guess.
A thermometer
There are many kinds of thermometer in use. Liquid in glass thermometers usually contain alcohol (dyed red or blue) or mercury (silvery coloured).
no please there's mercury which will just poison you
The Stirring rod is a long rod made of glass, but sometimes plastic, used to stir liquids. The rod is typically as thick as a pencil and between 6 and 12 inches long.
Taste is what sense you should never use in a laboratory
why can't we use laboratary termometer to measure human body temprature
a glass stirring rod
A clinical thermometer can only measure human body temperatures since it can measure no less than 35 degrees celcius and no more than 42 degrees celcius. An ordinary thermometer can measure and object or substance at any temperature. A clinical thermometer can only measure human body temperatures since it can measure no less than 35 degrees celcius and no more than 42 degrees celcius. An ordinary thermometer can measure and object or substance at any temperature.