A 100ml beaker is used for holding up to 100 ml of a substance/fluid. Often this is in a laboratory environment.
The contents could be the input into some work or the output/result of an experiment or process.
The mass of any 100 mL beaker will depend on the density of the material it is made of.
The density of 40ml of saline solution in a 50 ml beaker is 1.0046g/mL. The density will vary based upon the concentration of the salt added to the solution.
its like saying how long is a piece of string diameter varies with manufacturer and material used check with the manufacturer
There is no set diameter.
It depends on how it is manifactured, and on what measurements (thickness, highth, diameter).If you want to know, you should (always) first weight that particular beaker clean and empty before filling it with the matter of which you want to know the mass.
0.0038 liters
The mass of 100 ml of standard water under standard conditions is 100 grams, regardless of what it's in. We have no way of knowing the mass of the empty beaker.
a beaker have 100 ml of water and 5 grams of salt
The volume of a beaker does not provide enough information about its dimensions. It could be thin and tall or squat and short.
A beaker capable of holding 500ml
ml
in ml
A standard 100 ml beaker would be about 70~75 mm tall. Of course, this depends on the beaker ... Although beakers are generally cylindrical in shape, with a flat bottom, there are two main types. Standard or "Low-form" beakers typically have a height about 1.4 times the diameter. "Tall-form" beakers have a height about twice the diameter.
There's something missing from the question. It could be the part that was supposed to make it challenging. -- Fill the 40-ml beaker. -- Use it to fill the 30-ml one. -- Now you have 10 ml in the 40-ml beaker. -- Pour the 10 ml into the 200-ml beaker. -- Do all of that again. -- Now you have 20 ml in the 200-ml beaker. It doesn't matter what size the 200-ml beaker is. You don't need that number at all.
You can't. There are an infinite number of different beakers, all with different areas and different lengths, that all hold 100 ml. The volume doesn't tell the dimensions.
It's not possible to determine the volume of the beaker without knowing its composition and shape. But we can safely assert that the volume of the space inside it, which can be used to hold quantities of just about anything, is 700 ml .
250 ml beaker
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