balance scale need to put on the weight on the opposite and triple beam balance just need to slide the weight on
you use a balance
575
The lens on a microscope got their name from a lentil bean.(The lens on a microscope look like a lentil bean)
Sunlight trapped as chemical energy.
400 beans/lb = 400 beans/454 g = 1.14 g/bean Work: 400 beans/1 pound = 1 bean/x pounds 400x = 1 x = 1/400 x = .0025 1 bean = .0025 pounds 2.2 pounds/1 kg = .0025 pounds/x kg 2.2x = .0025 x = .0025/2.2 x = 0.0011363636363636363636363636363636 1 bean = .0011 kg 0.0011363636363636363636363636363636 * 1000 = 1.1363 ~1.14 g/bean!
triple bean blance
you place it on the scale
i am pretty sure its a triple beam balance
to find the mass
A triple bean balance....
the scientific tools are metersick,triple bean balance,ruler,and a meaering tobe
lol the triple BEAM balance is the scale with the silver plate at one end and the weights that you slide back and forth on a ruler to determine the weight of whatever is placed on the silver plate.
Its function is like any other balance; you use it to measure out a certain quantity of material based on mass. The three 'beams' have masses on them so when the balance is at equilibrium, the mass of the unknown material can be deduced.
A triple-beam balance is an instrument for measuring the mass of an object to a generally useful level of precision. It compares the object's mass to the triple beam balance's standardized calibrated mass through the manipulation of the balance's three masses (of 3 scales such as hundreds, tens and singles of grams), each along its own beam (three masses = three beams; thus, 'triple beam'). Mass is a very useful measurement for a variety of applications, including medicine and biology (to measure how much mass an organism -- including a person -- has, and by measuring and comparing triple beam balance measurements over time, whether that organism is getting heavier/fatter or thinner/losing weight).
you use a balance
Manure and water
Mass can either be measured in grams, kilograms, pounds But the SI unit of mass is kilograms