The weight of the bottle with the water minus the mass of bottle gives the weight of the water present.Mass/Volume=Density,therefore weight of the water/density gives the volume of water present in the bottle which is nothing but the volume of the bottle itself.
The mass of liquid is 5.760g - 4.570g = 1.190 grams. The volume is 3.360 millilitres. The density is mass/volume = 1.190g/3.360mL = 0.354166 ~ 0.3542gmL-1.
Well, This is very hard but u pour it in and out and in and out in and out and in and out and in and out in and out and in and out and in and out in and out and in and out and in and out in and out and in and out and in and out in and out and in and out and in and out in and out and in and out and in and out in and out and in and out and in and out in and out and in and out and in and out in and out and in and out and in and out in and out and in and out and in and out in and out and in and out and in and out in and out and in and out and in and out in and out and in and out and in and out in and out and in and out. And then it will evaporate.
density is mass / volume. pour the water into a measuring clyinder, weigh it on scales then minus the weight of the empty clyinder. Divide the mass by the volume and you'll get the density.
Question as asked cannot be answered. We know that the bottle can contain 500 mL of ketchup, but we don't know the volume of the material from which the bottle is made, nor the correct density (the figure given as density, 1.43 g, is actually a mass). In addition even if we assume that the figure given for density is 1.43 g/mL is an actual density, from the sentence structure we have a volume for ketchup, and a density of the material in the bottle ("density" refers back to bottle, not to ketchup—"Bottle contains ... and has a density of"). If the one who posed the question meant to write, "If a bottle contains 500 ml of ketchup, and the ketchup has a density of 1.43 g/l, what is the mass of the ketchup in the bottle in grams", then the original answer to the question 715g/mL mass = density x volume is correct.
an empty water bottle
Since air is less dense than water, the air pushes the bottle upward. The water filled bottle would sink because the density is greater than water.
defination of liquid x
Yes, a capped, empty, plastic water bottle will almost always float in water. This is because the density of plastic water bottles (the 12- or 20-oz kind) is very low compared to water itself. As long as it is empty and capped, no water will enter the bottle while it is tipped over in the liquid, and so it will not be weighed down by the addition of any liquid.
Nothing. The bottle is now truly empty.
A small bottle or flask used to measure the specific gravities of liquids; the bottle is weighed when it is filled with the liquid whose specific gravity is to be determined, when filled with a reference liquid, and when empty. Also known as density bottle; relative-density bottle.
The weight of the bottle with the water minus the mass of bottle gives the weight of the water present.Mass/Volume=Density,therefore weight of the water/density gives the volume of water present in the bottle which is nothing but the volume of the bottle itself.
full or empty?
plastic water bottle density
The ullage is the empty space in a closed bottle. So in a bottle of water, the ullage is between the surface of the water and the bottom of the bottle cap.
The answer will depend the volume of the bottle and the temperature and pressure. Assuming that the experiment is carried out at normal temperature (20 deg C) and one atmospheric pressure, the density of water is 0.9982071 grams per cm3. So, if the volume of the water in the bottle is V cm3 = V cc or V ml, then the mass of the filled bottle is 25 + V*0.9982071 grams.
The answer depends on how big the bottle is and what material it is made of.