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The volume of the water in Beaker X will be 100cm3, as you are not adding any more water to the equation (50X+100Y is not 150Y or X, but 50X+100Y) The total volume of matter in Beaker X will be 150cm3, and if the beaker is labelled, the volume measure will indicate 150cm3 due to the displacement of water. But as the answer to your question, the volume of water in Beaker X must be 100cm3 even though visual indicators will not show this due to the displacement of water by marbles
A piece of laboratory equipment made of glass or plastic designed to contain and pour liquids.
A beaker is a simple container for stirring, mixing and heating liquids
A beaker measures fluids and usually sits on the middle shelf of Delong's closet, but a pipette only contains a smaller amount of fluid and remains in a container of pipettes in Delong's closet.
- to contain chemicals - to make chemical reactions - to mix liquids - to collect the liquid from a filtration device - to make titrations
in beaker the substance that contains is largely transpearable ,but in pippette the substance tat contain is transparable only drop-wise
A beaker contains a liquid.
A beaker is used to contain a liquid substance either chemical or water based.
If a beaker containing glucose is permeable to glucose, then the glucose will go through the beaker.
A beaker is used to contain a liquid substance either chemical or water based.
A beaker (Berzelius or Erlenmeyer) is used for: - to contain a liquid, or powdered and granulated materials - to be the container for chemical experiments - to be the container for the dissolution of materials - to collect the solution from a distillation apparatus - to contain a substance to be titrated
The beaker has a high chance of shattering.
Beaker A: 15 C Beaker B: 37 C Beaker B contains water molecules that have the greater kinetic energy (on average). Since beaker B is at a higher temperature than beaker A, the water molecules must be moving faster in beaker B than in beaker A (on average). If heat is being applied to the beakers, then the increased amount of heat applied to beaker B is greater, and the heat will cause the water molecules in beaker B to move faster than the water molecules in beaker A (on average). Kinetic energy = (1/2) (mass) (velocity)^2 Since the velocity of the a water molecule in beaker B is on average greater than the velocity of an average water molecule in beaker A, the water in beaker B has a higher kinetic energy.
a laboratory beaker is a laboratory tool which is ued to heat an liquids up or to contain liquids...
The verb "to contain" can be synonymous with "hold" or "enclose" or simply "have".Examples : "The bulb contains (has) a filament". "The case contains (encloses) the parts of the computer." "The beaker contains (holds) the liquid chemical."
1.7M
54ml