its not accurate.
to get an accurate reading of the liquid inside the beaker, the thermometer should not rest on the bottom of the beaker.
burette
A Volumetric Pipette is the most accurate and used for titration calculations, if you include that as a type of pipette then it is FAR more accurate than a graduated cylinder. A beaker is very inaccurate so don't even go there.
Inform their teacher and then throw the beaker in the broken glass
its not accurate.
to get an accurate reading of the liquid inside the beaker, the thermometer should not rest on the bottom of the beaker.
burette
The beaker is a container for liquid substances in the laboratory. It is less accurate than the graduated cylinder because its line have bigger spaces/intervals
Yes, the markings on your 50 mL beaker would be accurate enough to use for precise meansurement of volumes. The markings on a 50 mL Erlenmeyer flask would also be accurate enough.
the least accurate way to identify a mineral
a displacement beaker (canister) is used to determine volume of irregular objects. Water is put into the beaker up to the spout, and then an object is placed inside; the water that pours out is collected in a more accurate measurement device, this water is equal (or close to) the volume of the object.
the accurate and most correct answer is age 4-39
no, the air currents that are set up by the heat radieting will make it hard to obtain accuracy
Depends on how accurate your results need to be. If you're not using grade A or B glassware and its just a standard beaker then the effect of the residual water will be negligible compared to the calibration error of the beaker.
The observable color is the least dependable method of mineral identification.
Beakers are for very short term storage of chemicals. They are graduated, but not accurately, so they are impractical for meaningful measurements. A beaker's graduations are estimates at best; to be accurate, use a graduated cylinder for measuring liquid volume.