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Well, for a solid, you would draw the particles close together and touching so that none of them could be moved around. For a gas you would draw them very spaced apart with none touching, and for a liquid you would draw them some where in the middle with some touching and some spaced out.
it would be the same
Decrease
If an object has moved, I would say it has moved; there has been moment.
it would shrink in cold and expand in warm, if you really want to surprise your teacher say it has to do with particle theory
Well, for a solid, you would draw the particles close together and touching so that none of them could be moved around. For a gas you would draw them very spaced apart with none touching, and for a liquid you would draw them some where in the middle with some touching and some spaced out.
the beaker would feel hot
The marble will have the motion of the person who dropped it (I assume you mean by 'dropped' that it is not thrown by the person, just dropped), whilst I assume the beaker is stationary. I also assume the person is moving horizontally and the beaker is upright. Therefore the marble will arrive in the beaker with some sideways velocity and will strike the side of the beaker with a horizontal component of velocity as well as a vertical component. I should think it will spin round the beaker a few times before coming to rest, it might even bounce right out. You can't predict this exactly without some more information.
When you pored it into the beaker it would be there. It has to be added by some process. Using the faucet or another container with water in it would be the simplest manner.
" beaker " and " vessel " would be suitable.
When measuring a liquid.
A chemical system consists of the system and the surroundings. If you're dealing with a solution in a beaker, the solution would be the system and the beaker and air would be the surroundings.
For this you would have to look at the beaker. Most modern beakers measure in litres and millilitres.
We predict there will be rain later.The computer will help predict the path of the hurricane.The psychic could not predict that his show would be postponed.
liquid volume
No one could predict who would answer this question.
No. The glass of the beaker, since it is hot, not cold, would not cause the ambient moisture to coalesce on the glass