Get two differently shaped messuring jugs, pour water into one up to a certain mark - then pour it from there into the other one conservation of mass should mean that it messures the same amount.
The substance could liquefy or solidify. Cooling a gas: change from the gas phase to the liquid phase Cooling a liquid: change from the liquid phase to the solid phase
If, for example, you were reading the volume of liquid in a burette where you can quite easily get gas bubbles, the bubble will increase the volume of the liquid and your reading will not be accurate. This is especially important when you are doing a titration because if the gas bubble escapes then the total volume of liquid needed for the titration will not corrospond to the reading you would get from the burette.
Put some copper(ii) sulphate crystals in the liquid and if they turn blue from white then the liquid is water. Also if you put some anhydrous cobalt chloride and the water turns pink from blue then the liquid is water.
I would say that broth is a liquid, as it flows freely unless it is kept in a confined area. It isn't a gas as it cannot diffuse or change volume and isn't a solid unless frozen. the steam from hot broth could be a gas though...
solid to gas,solid to liquid,liquid to gasare endothermicthe reverse are exothermicSource: http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20081022202228AAFplBc
You could immerse it in a liquid, and measure the volume of the displaced liquid.You could also use integration techniques.You could immerse it in a liquid, and measure the volume of the displaced liquid.You could also use integration techniques.You could immerse it in a liquid, and measure the volume of the displaced liquid.You could also use integration techniques.You could immerse it in a liquid, and measure the volume of the displaced liquid.You could also use integration techniques.
- by the variation of the temperature- by the variation of the pressure
Volume is the amount of 3-dimensional space occupied by an object. It could be a liquid, but it can also be a gas. For example, a glass of air.
Liquid water changes from a liquid to a solid at around 0oC.
no they could only take up space
Yes that is true (for any given temperature and / or pressure, as both of those factors could affect the volume of a liquid)
Volume is how much cubic units could hold, and capacity is how much an object can hold a liquid.
i don't think so. i don't think i ever saw grams express a measurement of a liquid. The Gram is a measurement of weight since liquid has weight it "Could" be described in this way however the more usual way of describing a liquid in Metric is to use Litres,centelitres,millilitres. If it is literally the 'Volume' of a liquid then you would use Metres2,Centemeters2,millimetres2
find the PH of it
The amount of a liquid that is displaced by a solid = the volume of that solid. You could half fill a graduated cylinder. Drop something that sinks into the graduated cylinder to test its volume.
Immerse it in a liquid, and measure how much the level of the liquid rises.
yes ex. check the volume before you turn the tv on please