Yes, a smaller glass of water would be easier to warm up because of the smaller volumn.
depends on how large the glass is
This question is impossible to answer. The glass could be the size of a small teacup or the size of a large cookie jar. Thus, the fluid ounces would be different.
If you are familiar with a glass cutter, use that to resize the mirror. My best suggestion would be take it to a glass shop and let them do it. They can bevel the edges and its a whole lot safer.
A refracting telescope.
The word "large" is rather ambiguous.Here's how I personally would rank them:1 fluid ounce: small1 pint: large1 quart: more larger1 gallon: breathtakingly large
At room temperature in a classic 'Bordeaux' wine glass.
How much is a scarbough and company glass jar
depends on how large the glass is
If it is running continously it either is not large enough for the area you trying to cool or it may be low on refrigerant. If it is shutting off before reaching the desired temperature you may have a defective thermostat.
Possibly a large glass jar of some description. If not, boxes are always good.
A change in temperature of the core would probably have to be rather large to be noticeable, however it would affect plate tectonics. Lowering the temperature of the core would slow down activity and raising it would increase.
This question is impossible to answer. The glass could be the size of a small teacup or the size of a large cookie jar. Thus, the fluid ounces would be different.
Simply put, ambient temperature is the temperature that surrounds a point of interest. It is the average temperature in the area of focus. For instance, if we were inside an industrial complex and we were examining the ambient temperature of a large room we would have to consider what is contributing to that temperature. Is the large room empty or is there machinery or people that are generating heat in that area? All the sources of heat and cool would average out in that area and that temperature would be the ambient temperature. Room temperature is comfortable to live in and is generally determined to be around 20 to 25 degrees Celsius (68 to 77 degrees Fahrenheit). The ambient temperature of a house (inside) that is at room temperature would be the same (20 degrees Celsius), but the ambient temperature outside on a winters day would be much cooler than room temperature, maybe even freezing. The temperature given on the news or at a location is the ambient temperature for that area.
Yes. Large hail can easily break glass.
Assuming the lens of the camera is made of glass, the answer is no. Glass is a very good insulator and it would an extremely large current (along the order of lightning) to overcome the insulating properties inherent in glass.
Toughened glass was first invented by a glassmaker who wanted to make a windscreen for a vehicle such as a car or a train so that it would break into lots of tiny fragments that would cause less injury to someone if they were thrown through it if the vehicle was involved in a collision. (If ordinary glass were used it would crack into large pieces which would badly cut that person.)
schooner