The problem you would have is that the sugar cube would not be at its regular size so to solve that you would have to put the water in first and then put the sugar cube in it. After that is done then record the volume the sugar starrts to melt into the water.
a sugar cube has air spaces in it. when put in water, the spaces will fill. the volume of water displaced will therefore be less than the original volume of the cube, so no
Well I tried this yesterday. I had an 80/20 water/IPA mix. The water went milky and there was a foam on top of the water. The effectiveness of the IPA was diluted as well. I use it as a solvent and it was not effective at this concentration.
Mixing sugar in a coffee is a physical change. Mixing sugar in coffee is a physical change because it does not form a new substance, it is still sugar and coffee. If you decided to mix sugar and water to make sugar water, the water could be left to evaporate and the sugar crystals would still be there. So mixing sugar in coffee is also very easy to reverse.
Yes, have you ever tried a fizzy drink in a can with added CO2?
No, I have not tried a lithium citrate drink for its potential health benefits.
First, if it happened to be a floating soap, it would have to be forced down to displace its full volume of water. Otherwise, it would only displace its own weight of water. Whatever tool was used to force it down also would have volume, and its volume would have to be subtracted from the volume of water displaced. Second, since soaps are made so that they break down in the presence of water, part of its volume would be lost to the water and would have to be accounted for: both the portion that remained in the water container (no problem), and more problematic, the portion that flowed out.
a sugar cube has air spaces in it. when put in water, the spaces will fill. the volume of water displaced will therefore be less than the original volume of the cube, so no
This was the Sugar Act.
Root; you tried to get to the root of the problem, meaning the bottom or cause of the problem.
William Penn was an English real estate entrepreneur and founder of Pennsylvania. He had very cordial relations with native Americans like Lenape Indians. He respected their culture and had never tried to displace them from their native lands.
This was the Sugar Act.
the British Government tried stop smuggling by passing The Sugar Act but people still passed food and hid some in their homes
A case is tried in court.
sugar act :)
Halifax
This was the Sugar Act.
Sugar is soluble i tried it in my science cass.=) Sugar is soluble i tried it in my science cass.=)