the glass is malleable
turn into a solid
describe how heating can change the water
With most liquids, the attractive force between the liquid and the container is greater than the attraction between the individual liquid molecules. So the liquid "sticks" to the side of the container. A few liquids have a "backwards" meniscus. An example is mercury. If you put mercury in a test tube, it would be higher in the middle than at the edges.
the graph would look like a normal heating curve however at 0 degrees celsius and 100 degrees celcius, there would be a flat line.
Inform their teacher and then throw the beaker in the broken glass
The heating curve of water and the heating curve of glass are similar in that they both illustrate the relationship between the temperature of the substance and the amount of energy added to it as it is heated. However, there are some key differences between the two curves. One major difference is that water has a much higher specific heat capacity than glass. This means that water requires more energy to raise its temperature by a certain amount than glass does. As a result, the heating curve for water will be flatter than the heating curve for glass, indicating that it takes more energy to raise the temperature of water. Another difference is that water has a phase change (melting and boiling) at certain temperature ranges, whereas glass does not. So, the heating curve of water will have a steep increase in temperature at the freezing point and the boiling point, indicating the energy absorbed during the phase changes. Additionally, the thermal expansion coefficient of water is much higher than that of glass, meaning that water expands much more than glass when heated, which also affects the heating curve. In summary, the heating curve of water is flatter and has more steep increases due to phase changes and thermal expansion, while the heating curve of glass is steeper and does not have phase changes. John Carlo Coronado
AnswerAlcohol freezes at -114. i would imagine that the heating curve would be similar to the differences in freezing curve..
If both of them consist of water and ice at the same time then the temperature for both of them is zero Celsius (from the heating curve of water)
it must be an atom
the heating curve is circa 20-30 C, while the cooling curve is circa 0 C
The temperature of steam cannot exceed 100°C
The meniscus is the curve at a liquid's surface by which one measures the volume of the liquid. A meniscus can be concave or convex depending on whether it is attracted to itself or the glass.
Technically, No. Water in a glass (or other vessel) has a curved surface known as a meniscus. A large body of water (like an ocean) actually follows the curve of the earth. So the surface of the water is a curve or section of a sphere.
turn into a solid
When measuring the volume of a liquid in a graduated cylinder, you read it at eye-level and at the bottom of the curve of the meniscus. This is true for water and aqueous solutions. Some "non-water" liquids do not form a meniscus in a glass cylinder. Also, water does not form a meniscus in a plastic cylinder.
Ground salt is soluble in water, glass is not. Put the mixture in a strainer and run water over it for an extended period. Water. The salt dissolves, the glass doesn't.
Solar and tankless