A jar has a fixed volume.
Nope. Water does not compress.
yes
Empty the 5-liter jar and remove 1 liter of the 7-liter jar.
If you have a large jar filled with mercury and a small jar filled with water, then the mercury has more volume than the water. If the water is in the large jar, then the water has more volume than the mercury.
In an ideal world a solute (sugar) dissolves in a solvent (water) without altering the volume. This is not always 100% true. The solute dissolves into the interstices of the solvent. Interstices means the holes between molecules - like pouring sand into a jar of marbles.The volume does not seem to change as the interstices are filled with the solute.
A liquid doesn't have a shape of its own, instead it'll always get its shape from the container its in.liquids (along with gases) take the shape of their storage container.
Temperature is really just the amount of kinetic energy in the molecules of a substance. If you add more energy by heating the substance then the molecules dash about faster and faster. This increases the pressure if the substance is constrained, like gas in a jar or in a bomb.
A gas.
Calculate the volume of one sweet. Calculate the volume of the jar and then divide the volume of the jar by the volume of a sweet.
The volume of a jar in millimetres does not make any sense because a millimetre is a measure of length, not volume.
Jar file is Java AR-chive Java Archive File, commonly referred to as a Jar File is nothing more than a compressed archive file.
The numerical value would depend on the volume of the jar
The volume and shape of a gas are determined by its volume and shape of its container.
It depends on what is inside the jar. It could be food, condiments, cosmetics, or any other substance or product that is stored in a jar.
there is a sweet in the jar
The volume of the jar should be on the bottom. i.e. 2 L for a 2 liter jar.
-- Gases change their shape and volume to match the container they're in. -- Liquids change their shape but not their volume. -- Solids don't change anything. It doesn't matter if they're in a glass jar, a rubber balloon, or a paper bag. ===== A Gas
I assume you are thinking about a situation where the jar is airtight.In this case, a larger jar will have more air in it, and therefore more oxygen; the candle will be able to burn longer in a larger jar. I would expect the time it burns to be roughly proportional to the volume of the jar.
Temperature is really just the amount of kinetic energy in the molecules of a substance. If you add more energy by heating the substance then the molecules dash about faster and faster. This increases the pressure if the substance is constrained, like gas in a jar or in a bomb.