Minute Rice only doubles in volume because it's precooked and has already lost 1/3 of its volume.
1.1368804gcm-1 when one grain equals 25mg otherwise it's the mass of the grain divided by the volume of the grain mass/volume=density
It is huge when it is in your eye.
The grain hold was not on the Enterprise. It was on the K7 space station base. It had 1,771,561 tribbles inside the grain hold. It held several tons of grain. Each tribble was approximately one cup in volume.
For that one minute, that the grain of sand drops, the amazement of the world is presented right before your very own eyes.I think that is what might mean ?maybe not...
If you intend to follow a recipe using long grain rice in the place of Minute Rice, you should cook the long grain rice first. If you don't, the rice will be under-cooked.
It is 0.00016 times its volume.
For water (density 1 kg/liter), that would be a volume of one cubic millimeter. That's about the size of a grain of sand.For water (density 1 kg/liter), that would be a volume of one cubic millimeter. That's about the size of a grain of sand.For water (density 1 kg/liter), that would be a volume of one cubic millimeter. That's about the size of a grain of sand.For water (density 1 kg/liter), that would be a volume of one cubic millimeter. That's about the size of a grain of sand.
the best and most accurate way would be to find a container that measures volume accurately (a graduated cylinder would work well) and fill it with a known amount of water(say, 10 mL). Then count out a number of rice grains (20 or 30 would be enough) and drop them into the the cylinder with the water. Tap the cylinder to make sure there are no bubbles attached to the rice grains, and then record the total volume or the rice and the water (or where the water is up to on the cylinder). If you subtract the volume of the water (the first measurement) from the volume of the rice+water (the second measurment) you will get the volume of the rice. Divide by the number of grains, and you'll have the average volume of a grain of rice.if you want to find the volume of a particular grain of rice, then you can do the same process with just one grain of rice, but you will need something that measures volume much more accurately than a graduated cylinder
mass is best measured by fluid volume displacement
It depends on whether you wish to measure its length, its volume or its mass.
Sorry, Wrong Units. Grains are weigh and mL (milliliters) are volume.
Yes. A grain is 64.79891 milligrams or 0.0647 grams regardless of what you are weighing. Of course, as another keen poster pointed out the volume of 'bullet' and the volume of powder will not be the same because the two substances have different densities. A ton of feathers weighs the same as a ton of bricks.