yeah.
You get more water in 1 straw then you get out of 2 straw because when you have 2 straws you just get more air then water.
No, sipping through two straws at once does not double the amount of liquid you can consume. The total amount of liquid you can sip through two straws is limited by your own natural suction power.
No, sipping through many straws at once would not allow you to drink the same amount of liquid as through one straw. The total surface area of many straws would be greater than that of one straw, resulting in a slower flow rate of liquid.
It is very interesting to find out that straws are actually more easily to catch fire than wood...!
One straw because there is a gap between the middle of the two straws which lets in a lot of air allowing you to drink less
No, sipping the same amount of liquid through multiple straws at once is not the same as drinking from one straw. This is because each straw will have a separate flow rate, so the total liquid consumed will be different and likely slower than drinking through a single straw.
You can tell if one liquid is more dense than another by comparing their densities. The denser liquid will have a greater mass per unit volume than the less dense liquid. One common way to compare densities is by observing which liquid sinks and which floats when they are layered on top of each other in a container.
With multiple straws.
1/26
How you can tell is the temperature between the two liquids. If one of the liquid's temperature is warmer than the other one, then that liquid has more thermal energy.
1 kiloliter = 1,000 litersThose would hold more than a single one can.
No, pure liquid iodine will be I2. Just one type of atom, iodine.