By the heat conductivity the material the cup is made from.
Yes, the size (volume and mass) and the type of the cup will affect its temperature
A liquid (water) takes on the temperature you give it. You need to boil the water if you want to brew a cup of tea. Having brewed your cup of tea, it will take on the shape of the cup you use. Therefore, gas and liquids take on the shape of the container.
Most liquids will expand when heated up.
you will need: the liquid a cup a scale first: way the cup then jot the weight down secondly: pore the liquid into the cup thirdly: it and then jot it down forthly: take away the weight of the cup from the cup and the liquid and you have the weight of the liquid
Yes, at room temperature, if the amount of liquid is the same in tea cup and a bathtub, then bathtub cools faster. This is because more surface area of liquid is in contact with air. Assumptions made: The liquids in both the containers are the same. And both have been heated to a temperature higher than that of room temperature.
Yes, the size (volume and mass) and the type of the cup will affect its temperature
Yes, the higher the temperature, the faster materials dissolve in the given liquid
It will not affect the mass in any way whatsoever.
depends but yes probaly
what is "this" supposed to mean
Yes. The temperature of the liquid and the wax both affect the action of a lava lamp.
Yes. The temperature of the liquid and the wax both affect the action of a lava lamp.
the freezing temperature of the liquid, the container it is in, the surface are exposed to the colder mass, the original temperature of the liquid before being exposed to the colder mass, the denseness of the liquid.
A liquid (water) takes on the temperature you give it. You need to boil the water if you want to brew a cup of tea. Having brewed your cup of tea, it will take on the shape of the cup you use. Therefore, gas and liquids take on the shape of the container.
Most liquids will expand when heated up.
the higher the temperature, the higher the volume of a solid - michelle strafer
Vapor pressure of the liquid, ambient pressure, temperature, and surface area of the liquid.