When the force due to gravity on a drop, acting in the downward direction, becomes infinitesimally greater than the upward force of surface tension, the drop detaches from the stalagmometer and falls down.
Primary oocyte is surrounded by flattened epithelial cells called follicular cells.
The flattened portion of a leaf is called the blade. It is the broad, typically green part of the leaf where photosynthesis occurs.
The flattened cells that fit together like tiles are called squamous cells. They are found in tissues like the skin, lungs, and blood vessels, where their shape allows for efficient gas exchange and barrier protection.
Squamous epithelium (or) pavement epithelium which tend to have horizontally flattened, elliptical nuclei because of the thin flattened form of the cell. which are found on the lining of cavities like mouth, blood vessels, heart and lungs and make up the outer layers of the skin.
A broad, flattened, dense connective tissue is known as a tendon. Tendons are tough bands of fibrous tissue that connect muscle to bone, providing support and transmitting the force generated by the muscle to the bone to produce movement.
A pencil with it's tip cut off and flattened.
They are both three dimensional ovals with a flattened base, however, a cone has a pointed tip and tapers down to the base while a cylinder has two flattened circular bases.
tell supose experiment ofsurface tension by drop method
It's an instrument used to determine the number of drops in a given quantity of liquid.
Use of the Stalagmometer allows for easy measurement of surface tension in solutions. The specified stalagmometer, 2.5 mL volumetric, is used to calculate the surface tension by measuring drop weight per volume of a sample in relation to a reference liquid. As a liquids drop weight is relatively proportional to its surface tension, the surface tension of a sample can be determined by comparison of the drop weight to that of a known reference liquid. This provides the formula: Surface Tension Measurement: 1. Remove a sample of solution from the bath and allow cooling to room temperature. 2. Position the stalagmometer on a pipette stand so that the sample solution can drip from the flat end of the instrument. 3. Using a pipette bulb, draw the cooled solution up past the top graduation mark on the stalagmometer. 4. Remove the pipette bulb and watch the bubble edge of the solution as it falls through the stalagmometer. 5. Begin counting the number of drops that fall from the end of the stalagmometer as soon as the edge of the bubble reaches the Start Mark on the stalagmometer. 6. Continue counting the drops until the bubble edge of the sample reaches the End Mark. Record the number of drops and repeat two more times. Average the three readings and record this as "N" 7. Calculate the surface tension as follows: Surface Tension = (14401) (D) (N) D = Density of Sample Solution (If unknown, use 1.25) N = Number of Sample Drops
No, a stalagmometer is not used for viscosity measurement. It is used to determine the surface tension of a liquid by measuring the time taken for a drop to fall through a capillary tube. Viscosity is typically measured using viscometers or rheometers.
An instrument for measuring the size of drops suspended from a capillary tube, used in the drop-weight method. Also known as stactometer; stalogometer.
its an flattened sphere
its an flattened sphere
a circle that has been flattened a little is an
If by "flattened" you mean "like someone took a sphere and sat on it", that would be an oblate spheroid.
No, Ella Syndrome with a flattened pituitary gland is not hereditary.