There is no exact answer. The coefficient changes with pressure, temperature and salinity. For seawater this value can be found in a paper by safarov, called thermal properties of seawater, table 11.It is available at ocean-sci.net
The coefficient of cubical expansivity would normally be the cube of the coefficient of linear expansivity unless that coefficient is different in different directions for a material. In that case it would be the product of the linear coefficients in the different directions.
No. The expansivity is on a per unit basis just like the specific heat or density is.
expansion of liquids
This increase of volume is called expansion
Since most metals are isotropic, the cubical coefficient of expansion is three times the linear coefficient of expansion. The linear coefficient of expansion is obtained from measurement and tables for the specific material which are readily available.
coeficient de dilatation du monopropylene glycol
The coefficient of thermal expansion depends on the temperature and pressure. It a pressure of 1 atmosphere the coefficient of thermal expansion are:at 4 deg C : –0.1321 at 20 deg C : 0.1212 at 50 deg C : 0.4280 at 100 deg C: 0.7454.
the sides of the cubical box would be 7 meters
Cubical.
creativity
Coefficient of cubical expansion for liquid is much less than that of the gaseous form. So to avoid burst due to rise in temperature liquid is safer than gas.
Salt (sodium chloride) has a cubical crystal lattice. So, at any scale, it appears cubical.
Spherical ;)
The first two terms in a binomial expansion that aren't 0
96 g
No its standard form