This is one of those questions that is best answered by trying it, but I will explain nonetheless. So here are your possibilities: 1. Dunk a sheet in water. The volume change here will be really small. A 1ft by 1ft sheet of aluminum foil will only have a volume of around 1.5 cm3. To get a piece of glassware big enough to accomodate the sheet will pretty much ensure that the precision is not sufficient to see a 1.5 mL volume change. 2. Wad up the aluminum foil into a ball. Just try this. TWad aluminum into a compact ball and measure its diameter. Assume a sphere and calculate its volume. Find its mass and divide to get the density. If you were really good about wadding up the ball you should get a density of between 1.5 and 2.0 g/mL---way lower than the actual value of 2.70 g/mL. Simply put---you can't exclude all the empty space. 3. The most accurate answer you can get is from repeatedly folding the aluminum until it is in a small compact shape, but even then you will end up short of the actual density when using water displacement because you can't remove all the air.
Neither Dr. Pepper nor Sprite will blow up a balloon the biggest. The size of the balloon mainly depends on the release of carbon dioxide gas from the beverage, so it would be best to use a carbonated drink with a high carbonation level to blow up the balloon the biggest.
BY THE GOLD FOIL EXPERIMENT . IN THAT EXPERIMENT ALMOST ALL THE THE a-particles CROSSED THE GOLD FOIL THUS THE +ve REGION OCCUPIES VERY LESS SPACE.IF YOU WANT TO SEE THE IMAGE OF GOLD FOIL EXPERIMENT PLEASE OPEN THE FOLLOEING LINK: https://reich-chemistry.wikispaces.com/file/view/gold_foil.gif
Ernest Rutherford's gold foil experiment in 1909 showed that most of the alpha particles passed straight through the gold foil, indicating that atoms are mostly empty space. This suggested that the positive charge in an atom is concentrated in a small, dense nucleus.
The state of matter of copernicium is a big problem ! Some scientists suppose that Cn is an extremely dense gaseous metal !?
The cast of A Big Ball of Foil in a Small NY Apartment - 2009 includes: Sean Logan as TinFoil Ball Builder
BIG
There is no biggest tennis ball. the normal tennis ball has 6.7 cm as diameter.
The heaviest legal bowling ball weighs 16 pounds.
You get an apple, a basket ball, and a huge bounce ball and compare them.
Not really. In rank it is the 31st biggest state
500 lbs., and 6 ft. 5in.
14 ft high 20 ft long
its about big as 40 cars staked on each other
Rajasthan - 342,236 sq.km
Ohio State
2/3 the size of the US.