Not if the original form included air. Styrofoam (packing material) will shrink to a simply amazing degree. Dense plastics will result in exactly the same volume, but if formed into a beverage container, then obviously, the air in the container won't stick around.
No, heating would cause it to lose mass. It may be nearly unmeasurable, but it would lose weight.
stroke volume =end diastolic volume - end of systalic volume. But how to measure these volume i don't know?
false, stroke volume decreases if the end volume decreases.
Plastic is melted by applying thermal energy -- heat. Plastic "bits" are dumped into a hopper, and a screw type feed mechanism forces them through a heated section of the screw housing. Resistance heating elements are used, and they convert electricity to heat energy to melt the plastic. The temperature is controlled by electronics, and run appropriately for the type of plastic being melted. This melted plastic is then forced out the end into molds in a process called injection molding.
stroke volume
No. The change in potential energy and momentum both depend on the mass of the object, and the metal ball and plastic ball have different masses. What's the same for both of them is their acceleration while they fall, the time they take to reach the ground, the moment when they hit the ground, and their speeds when they hit the ground.
end-diastolic volume(EDV) the volume of blood in each ventricle at the end of diastole, usually about 120/130 mL but sometimes reaching 200/250 mL in the normal heart.end-systolic volume(ESV) the volume of blood remaining in each ventricle at the end of systole, usually about 50/60 mL but sometimes as little as10/30 mL in the normal
Yellow Plastic Bucket ended in 1997.
The Plastic People of the Universe ended in 1988.
the sun will burn out or it might melt ice so a FLOOD might end
end diastolic volume is decreased
end diastolic volume is decreased