The white solid is a precipitate. The bubbles will be a gas. Without knowing which chemicals you are dealing with it's impossible to be more specific.
because water is a liquid and liquids are easy to pour most of the time and that is what a beaker is for.
A ship would be a little large for a beaker. A boiling chip on the other hand would help the liquid to boil smoothly, avoiding the phenomenon called bumping where large gas bubbles form suddenly, and shoot hot liquid out of the container.
A beaker contains a liquid.
Milliliters, sometimes liters
If a solid reactant is placed in a beaker of warm water and the temperature was slightly reduced after it dissolved, it may produce more bubbles as a result of more heat escaping.
The white solid is a precipitate. The bubbles will be a gas. Without knowing which chemicals you are dealing with it's impossible to be more specific.
the traditional use of a beaker is to hold liquids.
The purpose is to measure liquids and to boil it on your burner because of the big flat bottom and so you can pour the liquid a little more accurately when trying to do like a small drop of something.
because water is a liquid and liquids are easy to pour most of the time and that is what a beaker is for.
A piece of laboratory equipment made of glass or plastic designed to contain and pour liquids.
Beaker is usually used in holding liquids and work with them during chemical analysis. Generally Beakers are calibrated to allow the user to measure the liquid that is to be used. :'> Right?:)
jmjm,kuynmki
you can use a scale for weight, a beaker or measuring cup for liquid, and for gases idk
it shows that liquids can form in anything you want it in
It measures the amoun of liquid you have.
Vinegar, when added to bicarbonate of soda (or baking soda), will produce the described effect.
a laboratory beaker is a laboratory tool which is ued to heat an liquids up or to contain liquids...