No there isnt. Maybe in laboratories, but no permanently.
A meniscus, but whether it has a positive curve or a negative one depends on whether it wets the glass.
meniscus is when you fill the beaker upwith liquid. when yo go down to look at the beaker with eye level, you see a dip. that's the meniscus. -used in science
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.
the meniscus
The meniscus is the concave line of liquid that forms in a graduated cylinder (measuring volume) due to that liquid's adhesion (the tendency to want to stick to other things). When measuring a liquid's volume in a graduated cylinder, you read the volume from the bottom of the meniscus. Therefore, the meniscus does not measure anything, it is where you measure a liquid's volume from.
Meniscus
A meniscus, but whether it has a positive curve or a negative one depends on whether it wets the glass.
meniscus is the level of a liquid in a cylinder.
Yes. A meniscus is a visible curve in a liquid caused by the attraction of the liquid for the sides of the flask. Read the volume of your flask from the bottom of the meniscus.
meniscus is when you fill the beaker upwith liquid. when yo go down to look at the beaker with eye level, you see a dip. that's the meniscus. -used in science
Water's meniscus curves up. Mercury's meniscus curves down.
The meniscus - the upward curve of a liquid in a narrow vessel.Read more: When_water_is_ina_container_the_surface_of_the_water_is_curved_this_curve_is_called
The curve at the top of a liquid is the meniscus
The meniscus, which is creaded by adhesion of the liquid particles to the surface of the container. Water meniscus domes upwards - the water has greater bonding to its own molecules; Mercury meniscus domes downwards.
meniscus
Meniscus
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