5W30 recommended
Premium is recommended, but regular unleaded can be used.
the viscosity of the cup was horribly bad
Infinity is used in a variety of manners. Because it means going on forever, domains and ranges use infinity. For example, the domain and range of the equation y=x are both (-infinity,infinity). In calculus, infinity is commonly used in limits. This is in one of two ways; either the limit can approach infinity, or the number the limit is of can approach infinity. Normal models in statistics also use infinity.
Single viscosity is high quality oil. Mulit-viscosity oil is used for in the winter.
Yes. The rule is used to find the limit of functions which are an indeterminate form; that is, the limit would involve either 0/0, infinity/infinity, 0 x infinity, 1 to the power of infinity, zero or infinity to the power of zero, or infinity minus infinity. So while it is not used on all functions, it is used for many.
Low viscosity oil flows easier when it is cold but become thinner when it is hot.
You have to distinguish dynamic viscosity and kinematic viscosity. Different units are used for both - the standard (SI) unit for dynamic viscosity is Pascal x second, while the unit for kinematic viscosity is meter2/second.
Viscosity is the term used to describe how well a liquid flows. It measures the resistance of a liquid to flow and is influenced by factors like temperature and composition. Low viscosity liquids flow more easily, while high viscosity liquids flow more slowly.
Effective viscosity refers to the equivalent viscosity of a non-Newtonian fluid under specific flow conditions, while apparent viscosity is a term used to describe the measured viscosity of a non-Newtonian fluid, which may vary depending on the test method used. The effective viscosity takes into account the non-linear behavior of the fluid, while the apparent viscosity provides a simplified representation of its flow properties.
Yes, the Ostwalds viscometer can be used to measure the viscosity of more viscous oil.
Viscosity is the property used to classify media based on its normal consistency. Viscosity refers to the resistance of a fluid to flow, with high viscosity indicating a thicker consistency and low viscosity indicating a thinner consistency.
Relative viscosity is a measure of a fluid's resistance to flow compared to that of a reference fluid, often water. It is calculated by dividing the viscosity of the fluid by the viscosity of the reference fluid. Relative viscosity is commonly used in the study of fluid dynamics and in industries such as oil and gas, chemicals, and food processing.