the exact weight in water that excretes post humus from a 6 foot corpse.
Yes. The thicker the paper towel the more water it can absorb.
These paper towels are designed to absorb water. But also alcohols.
Because the paper is porous.
the paper towel sucks up some of the water but some sits on top of it, as the towel is saturated and cannot hold more water. Although it will not drip off unless there is to much and it can't be absorbed
Paper and cotton cloth absorbs water.
Bounty absorb water the faster
Yes. The thicker the paper towel the more water it can absorb.
A paper towel would absorb more water compared to A-4 paper or a piece of thin carton due to its higher porosity and ability to hold moisture. Paper towels are designed to quickly absorb liquid, while A-4 paper and thin carton are less absorbent and may become saturated more slowly.
A Viva paper towel is designed to be highly absorbent and can absorb up to 4-6 times its weight in water, depending on the specific type and quality of the paper towel. This makes them ideal for soaking up spills and messes effectively.
The most absorbant paper towel is Kleenex Viva. Studies show one sheet of Viva can absorb upto 27mLs of water.
yes. ex.) Bounty.
Both absorb something. A paper towel absorbs a waste liquid and our small intestine absorbs water and nutrients. Hope this helped!:)
I'm doing a science project on how to absorb oil and this is what i got You could use cotton balls or some old t-shirt, thick paper towel...ect.
These paper towels are designed to absorb water. But also alcohols.
Hide a piece of wet paper towel on the side that they are going to swab on. It will absorb most of the water from the paper towel instead of your saliva. No guarantee's though, only dilutes the actual test.
You get wet cellulose molecules.This is so easy to test it's not even a real experiment. Get a paper towel and dunk it in water. You'll get a wet paper towel, right? There hasn't been any phase transformation or anything fancy; your paper towel is now wet, and if you set it on the counter for a little while the water will evaporate and you'll have a dry paper towel again. Cellulose can absorb water, but it just acts as a container--like a really small drinking glass.
It depends on how many drops are put on the towel and how big the paper towel is. If it is full size, and you put one small drop on it, the towel would soak it up. The water would not fill up the whole paper towel, but just a bit. If it was a really big drop, it would probably soak through the paper towel and onto the surface the paper towel is laying on.