Want this question answered?
The temperature increases the deeper you go. For earth, the hottest area of the mantle is just before you hit the core. Here it's around 4,000 °C (7,230 °F).
density, hardness, boiling point, melting point, crystal structure, thermal conductivity, electrical conductivity, Curie point, magnetism, velocity of sound in material, etc.
If the mass increases with the volume (ie if the density remains the same) then the boiling point remains constant. If the volume remains contstant with rising mass (ie greater density) then the boiling point increases.
measurable you can measure it and observable you can see and observe it
Examples are temperature, color, hardness, melting point, boiling point, pressure, molecular weight, and density. Because intensive properties are sometimes characteristic of a particular material, they can be helpful as clues in identifying unknown substances.
the density will be greater at point B because my mommy says
at point A
It depends on the material and the location of points a and b.
the heat makes the density less or more dence depending were it is in the earths layers
The temperature increases the deeper you go. For earth, the hottest area of the mantle is just before you hit the core. Here it's around 4,000 °C (7,230 °F).
The answer depends on where points b and c are!
If the density of the liquid is greater than that of the object, the object will sink. This is because the liquid is denser and exerts a greater buoyant force on the object, causing it to sink until it reaches an equilibrium point where the buoyant force equals the gravitational force.
density, hardness, boiling point, melting point, crystal structure, thermal conductivity, electrical conductivity, Curie point, magnetism, velocity of sound in material, etc.
One substance will float on another if its density is less. By adding salt you are increasing the density of the solution. As you add salt, at some point the density of the solution will reach and then exceed the density of the egg
Because density is an intensive property, it does not depend on the amount of material. Density is a ratio between mass and volume, D=M/V. That specific ratio is constant for any material. For example, the smallest sample of aluminum and the largest sample of aluminum have a density of 2.70 g/cm^3 at room temperature. Density does change with temperature because temperature affects volume. The density of all samples of aluminum at its melting point is 2.375 g/cm^3.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aluminium
If the mass increases with the volume (ie if the density remains the same) then the boiling point remains constant. If the volume remains contstant with rising mass (ie greater density) then the boiling point increases.
The integral of the density function from the given point upwards.