can anyone say the answer
The students should not use the beaker with the crack as it poses a risk of breaking further while pouring water, potentially causing injury. They should find a different beaker that is intact and safe to use for their experiment.
Inside the beaker, the water absorbed heat energy, causing its temperature to rise and eventually boil. The steam formed from the boiling water then condensed on the cooler glass cover, forming water droplets on the bottom due to the temperature difference between the inside and outside surfaces.
Without boron, the glass beaker may not be able to withstand sudden temperature changes and could shatter due to thermal shock when placed in iced water. This is because borosilicate glass, which contains boron, has a lower coefficient of thermal expansion and is better suited for rapid temperature changes.
It depends what beaker your talking about.
The water in the beaker evaporated or was poured out.
nothing, it's only effective when salt is sprinkled ON the ice.
Yes, condensation could form on the outside of a beaker full of hot water if the surrounding air is cool enough to cause the water vapor in the air to condense on the cooler surface of the beaker. This is similar to how condensation forms on a cold glass of water on a warm day.
The students should not use the beaker with the crack as it poses a risk of breaking further while pouring water, potentially causing injury. They should find a different beaker that is intact and safe to use for their experiment.
Inside the beaker, the water absorbed heat energy, causing its temperature to rise and eventually boil. The steam formed from the boiling water then condensed on the cooler glass cover, forming water droplets on the bottom due to the temperature difference between the inside and outside surfaces.
beakers are not made of water, they are made of glass.
Without boron, the glass beaker may not be able to withstand sudden temperature changes and could shatter due to thermal shock when placed in iced water. This is because borosilicate glass, which contains boron, has a lower coefficient of thermal expansion and is better suited for rapid temperature changes.
It depends what beaker your talking about.
The water in the beaker evaporated or was poured out.
The ice forms on the outside of the beaker when the cold content inside the beaker cools down the surrounding air, causing moisture in the air to condense and freeze on the outside of the beaker. This process is similar to how dew forms on grass in the early morning.
A beaker is basically a glass cup with numbers on the side.It is used to measure water with. You might use it to heat water under a Bunsen Burner.
I believe Archimedes came up with this... Fill a beaker or glass to the brim with water. Place the beaker in a bath, bowl or similar. Gently place the rock into the glass of water, allow the liquid to overflow into the bowl. The water displaced by the rock (which is now in the bowl and you can measure the volume of) is the volume of the rock. Hope this helps!
When a glass breaks in a science class you should go wash your hands with soap and water because there might be chemicals in the glass because you can be infected by the chemicals that were in the glass that you broke you can get very sick.