No a balance can not measure volume however it does measure mass. You can find the volume by using the balance to find the mass of what ever you want then if you know the density of the thing then you simply divide the mass by the density.
Measure the mass of an empty dry container (beaker, vial, etc.) then add the liquid and reweigh. Then you find the mass of the liquid by subtracting the mass of the dry container from the combined mass.
A pan balance doesn't measure temperature it is a scale for measuring weight
yes it can
No, it can't it only measures mass.
Celsius, abbreviated to C. 0 = Water freezes, 100 = Water boils.
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius and freezes at 0 degrees Celsius.
Water with sugar in it freezes at a lower temperature. The more the sugar, the lower the freezing point of water.
Ocean water freezes just like freshwater, but at lower temperatures. Fresh water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit but seawater freezes at about 28.4 degrees Fahrenheit, because of the salt in it.
No - water freezes at zero degrees Celsius. The alcohol used in coolants freezes at a much lower temperature.
Because alcohol freezes at a lower temperature than water.
Celsius, abbreviated to C. 0 = Water freezes, 100 = Water boils.
32 is the temperature in degrees Fahrenheit there is also an expanded version of this which reads 32 is the T in D F at which W F 32 is the temperature in degrees Fahrenheit at which water freezes
32 is the temperature in degrees Fahrenheit at which water freezes
When water has a substance dissolved in it, it freezes at a lower temperature. Salt water has salt dissolved in the water, so it freezes at a lower temperature than fresh water.
Water freezes at 0o Celsius, or 32o Fahrenheit.
Water
32 Fahrenheit
it freezes and evaporates
Triple point of water, where water freezes/melts
because water freezes at 0oC....so when the temperature is lower than that the water freezes.
It is the Fahrenheit temperature scale