Nothing, if you don't add anything else to it. Maybe the glass will tip over.
I would place the watch glass on a balance, and then zero out the balance with the watch glass placed in the tray. After the balance is balanced with the watch glass, I would move the weights to represent an added five grams. I would then slowly add calcium chloride to the watch glass until the balance rebalances or zeroes out.
When salt water is poured into a glass containing cold tap water, the salt water will collect and settle at the bottom of the glass. This is due to the salinity and density of the salt water.
nothing, it's only effective when salt is sprinkled ON the ice.
Get larger,then smaller
salt corrodes glass
I would place the watch glass on a balance, and then zero out the balance with the watch glass placed in the tray. After the balance is balanced with the watch glass, I would move the weights to represent an added five grams. I would then slowly add calcium chloride to the watch glass until the balance rebalances or zeroes out.
It makes salt and water!
it dies
It dissolves.
When salt water is poured into a glass containing cold tap water, the salt water will collect and settle at the bottom of the glass. This is due to the salinity and density of the salt water.
If the temperature remain constant - nothing.
beakers are not made of water, they are made of glass.
They die because they can not live in saltwater, due to the salt.
It gets wet.
nothing, it's only effective when salt is sprinkled ON the ice.
This vegetable has a salted taste and is preserved for more time.
A watch glass is a little circle dish of glass or pyrex (heat-safe-glass). it is a smooth shallow concave (cup-like) plate. It is used to watch a little amount of solution evaporate, leaving behind a little pile of whatever was dissolved in it. Salt-water, for example, would dry to leave a little pile of salt in the middle.