It is going to flow, to the ocean
If it's only one cup of water, it will probably spread out a bit, maybe run into the gutter or into the grass, soak into the sidewalk or the ground, and then evaporate.
Measuring the temperature of the water in the cup would allow you to predict how high the pressure of water vapor inside the cup will rise, as the pressure of water vapor is directly proportional to the temperature of the water.
The cup of water and the large pot of water are both at the same temperature of 50 degrees Celsius, so they are equally hot. Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles in a substance, so in this case, both the cup and the pot contain water at the same level of heat energy.
The density of water at 4 °C is 1 gram per milliliter (1 g/mL).There are 236.588 mL in one cup.So 1 cup of pure water weighs about 236.588 g (about 8.3454 ounces, avoirdupois)This is true at 4°C (39.2 °F) where water is the densest (1000 kg/m3, and is pretty close at most other temperatures above freezing and below the boiling point of water. Water at room temperature is 998.2 kg/m3.
Horace Throate because he worked in a place where he had access to potassium cyanide. Also, his work involves gold and silver, and there were traces of gold and silver on Mantel's tea cup. Throate also helped to set the table after the tea was spilled.
The cup of soil would receive less heat energy compared to the cup of water because soil has a lower heat capacity and thermal conductivity than water. This means that soil would heat up or cool down more slowly than water when exposed to the same amount of heat energy.
it was a diffrent liquid
what you think happens to the frazen cup of water tat melts will it be the same amount of water as originally had
I think you need to try this. Put water in the freezer and see what happens.
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.
slowly evaporates.
It dissolves
It swells and expands....
Salt remain as a residue at the bottom.
If the cup plus the wood weighs less than all the water that the cup could hold, then the whole thing will float in the water. If the cup plus the wood weighs more than all the water that the cup could hold, then the whole thing will sink in the water. But, after the cup fills with water, the two blocks of wood will float on the surface, while the cup goes to the bottom.
It's not that cofee is more "liquidy" than water - it's just as "liquidy". The difference is in the manner coffee and water are consumed that makes the coffeee more apt to be spilled. Look of it this way: after the water has been drunk (usually in gulps), the glass is set down out of the way, while coffee is sipped and set down close at hand, making the cup more apt to be bumped and spilled.
Gelatin is dissolved in hot water and a gel is formed.
The salt will dissolve in the water, the water will evaporate and is turned to water vapor(steam) and the salt will be the only one left behind in the cup.