The cup is solid, but the water remains liquid unless you freeze it into ice.
Water is an amorphous liquid; it takes the form of any structure that contains it. Pouring water into a cup would result in a cup filled with "cup-shaped" water.
When water was poured into the cup, the coin became more visible due to the refraction of light. The water filled the air gaps between the coin and the cup, reducing the effects of reflection and making the coin easier to see.
It depends on what is in the cup, if you talking about the cup its self, then it is a solid.
A cup is a solid object made of materials like glass, ceramic, or plastic. While it can hold liquids or gases within it, the cup itself is not liquid or gas.
To make a styrofoam calorimeter, you will need a styrofoam cup, a lid for the cup, a thermometer, and a stirrer. Cut a hole in the lid to insert the thermometer. Fill the cup with a known volume of water and record its initial temperature. Place the cup in a larger container filled with water and heat or cool the water to a desired temperature. Place the lid on the cup and stir the water to ensure even temperature distribution. Record the final temperature of the water to calculate the heat exchange.
The answer will depend on the size of the cup and, therefore, the quantity of water in it!
When a cup is filled with boiling water, the heat from the water caused the material of the cup to experience thermal expansion. If the cup is badly made, then different parts of it will expand to different extents and this will create stresses in the material of the cup causing it to crack.
All you need to do for any solid is place it in enough water to displace the amount needed. For example, place the solid crisco in one cup of water in a two cup measuring cup, add the solid crisco until it hits the two cup line and you have a cup of solid crisco.
Both "full of" and "filled with" are correct, but they are used in slightly different contexts. "Full of" is typically used to describe a state of being, while "filled with" is used to indicate the action of pouring something into a space. For example, "The cup is full of water" versus "The cup is filled with water."
They gave the prisoners a small bowl or cup filled with water
Water is an amorphous liquid; it takes the form of any structure that contains it. Pouring water into a cup would result in a cup filled with "cup-shaped" water.
If you are asking if a cup filled with water and ice, when the ice melts, will the water overflow, then the answer is no. As the ice becomes water, then it loses its ability to displace the water that it was first displacing as it was ice. So in the end, the water level won't raise or fall as the ice melts, it just replaces the space it once filled with water, leaving you with a full cup of water.
its not
yes, this is why if you put a filled to the brim cup of water in the freezer, it overflows when it is frozen....
If it's a paper cup, the cup can absorb the water, but the water won't go in. A solid's particles are packed tightly together and a liquid's particles are a bit more spread apart. A solid only vibrates in place, and because of gravity, a liquid cannot go up. Hope this helps.
The zone of saturation would not be completely solid. However, the pore spaces would be filled with water.
The boiling point of water is just 100 deg celcius. But the ignition temperature for paper would be higher than 200 deg celcius. So when paper cup filled with water it cannot attain temperature higher than 100 deg. Hence no burning becomes possible