The smallest will be 1 ml +/- 0.01.
The smallest will be 1 ml +/- 0.01.
To measure the amount of liquid in a specific manner
10 ML
10 ML
If you measure properly, the amount of water does not change. Measurement with whatever graduated cylinder you choose will not alter the amount of liquid measured. Most people choose to measure once with a larger one, but if the amount of liquid falls between the measurement lines, you can measure the "leftover" with a smaller cylinder and find the exact answer.
It depends on the size of the cylinder - I've got one that measures down to 0.2 milliliters.
It's a tube used to measure exact amounts of liquid, usually for science.
A measuring beaker... a graduated cylinder or a buret
The amount that a graduated cylinder can measure does not change with time so the latest volume is the same as the volume earlier in time.
If the object in question is water proof, and small enough. You can measure the amount of displaced water when it is placed in a tank full of water, this may not work for a lot of things but it can help when attempting to measure some objects.
There are three ways to measure volume. If you are measuring a liquid, you need a graduated cyliner. If you are measuring the volume of a regular solid, you need a ruler to measure length, width, and height. You would then use the formula V=LxWxH. The third way to measure volume is to use displacement to find the volume of an irregular solid. You would put a certain amount of water in a graduated cylinder, write the starting amount down. Add the irregular solid to the graduated cylinder. Record the ending amount of liquid and subtract the ending amount minus the starting amount.
The volume of a liquid is normally measured by means of a graduated cylinder.
The easiest way to measure the amount of fluid it displaces. So if you fill a graduated cylinder with a certain amount of water, and then place the solid object inside the cylinder, the water level will increase. The amount of increase equals the solid objects mass. EUREKA!