Want this question answered?
A melting ice cube is a physical change, because the ice cube is only changing size, shape, volume and state of matter.It's not a chemical change, because it's not changing into a different kind of matter with different properties.
one minute
A piece of a white dwarf the size of a sugar cube would weigh about as much as a hippopotamus. Assuming that you could lift the spoon that contained the sugar cube, I doubt the body would be very happy about that treat!
Some examples of physical change include melting an ice cube, chopping wood, and breaking a piece of glass. Additional examples include tearing a piece of paper, combining water and sand, and boiling water.
This question cannot be answered sensibly. A centimetre cube is a measure of volume, with dimensions [L3]. A gram is a measure of mass, with dimensions [M]. Basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions such as these without additional information. It takes only a little mental effort to compare a centimetre cube of air and a cm cube foot of lead to see that the two will have very different masses.
To get the cube candy, first go to the ski lodge, then click on the mirror just above the fireplace.
It is in the lodge in the picture frame
A flat piece of paper is 2D. A cube is 3D. Therefore the drawing of the cube is a representation.
No. Each piece of the cube would have the same density.
At the ski lodge!
it is in the ski lodge in the mirror on the fireplace close to your candy bag
by drawing on a piece of paper
The circumference of an apple is roughly equal to the cube root of 6 * pi2 * volume
a cube and retanglar prism different bc they have different sizes and angle mesurements.
No. The square is all on one flat surface, like a piece of paper, but a cube has height off of the paper. When you set the cube down on the piece of paper, the place where it touches the paper is a square, but there's a lot more to it than that.
New York City, The Cube. Its gigantic and underground.
The word candy originally comes from qand, the Persian word for "sugar cube." Some people think this word came to Persian from Sanskrit or a Sanskrit-derived language. We know it then went from Persian into Arabic as qandi, and eventually into French as sucre candi.