i think the lowest density.
to get an accurate reading of the liquid inside the beaker, the thermometer should not rest on the bottom of the beaker.
It is important to let the sand settle at the bottom of your beaker so that the sand is separated from the liquid.
You can determine it by doing the process of displacement. All you do is fill a beaker with an amount of liquid that you know, and then put it in and find out how much it went up.
Hold it by the top or use a clamp. But make sure before you take the temperature you stir the liquid around in the beaker first and that you do not let it touch the bottom of the beaker as the glass will be hotter than your liquid.
Water is only at the bottom of a mixture of immiscible liquids if it is the densest liquid. If the other liquid is denser than water, water will be at the top, as would occur in a mixture of water and mercury in a beaker. The density of water is 1.00 g/ml, mercury is 13.5 g/ml and olive oil is about 0.85 g/ml. Therefore water will be on the bottom of an oil/water mixture, but will be on the top of a mercury/water mixture.
The density of the object is at least equal to, and possibly greater than, the density of the liquid in the beaker.
Decreases!
Density = mass/volume, so weigh a beaker, put your liquid in the beaker, weigh both beaker and liquid. With subtraction, find the weight of the liquid. Then, find the volume of the liquid with a graduated cylinder. Take mass/volume to find your density.
The density of a liquid can be measured with a beaker. the beaker is weighed alone, then a specific measured volume of the liquid is placed in the beaker and the beaker is reweighed. The difference between the beaker with and without the water is noted. from there the mass of the liquid for the specific volume is then known. using hte formula d = m/v, we can therefore determine the density. where m is in kg and v is in liters.
The sides or bottom of the beaker will likely be at a significantly different temperature than the liquid.
The bottom and sides of the beaker will be hotter than the liquid inside.
to get an accurate reading of the liquid inside the beaker, the thermometer should not rest on the bottom of the beaker.
The floating liquid will have a lower density than the liquid it is floating on.
The floating liquid will have a lower density than the liquid it is floating on.
It is important to let the sand settle at the bottom of your beaker so that the sand is separated from the liquid.
liquid density
What are you asking, specifically? If you want to know what you can conclude about each of these liquids, then you could say the liquids at the bottom are denser than the ones towards the top. (I think this is what your asking.) Other than that, I can't really help you here.... Q:which liquid would have the highest density? A: The layer at the bottom of the glass.