The shape of a container can significantly affect evaporation rates due to factors like surface area and volume. A wider container increases the surface area exposed to air, facilitating greater evaporation compared to a narrow container with the same volume. Additionally, the depth of the liquid can influence temperature and concentration gradients, further impacting evaporation rates. Overall, variations in container shape can lead to differing evaporation dynamics.
Gas not liquid because you may have too much liquid
A liquid takes the shape of its container, meaning it will occupy the space available to it. However, it has a definite volume that remains consistent regardless of the container's shape. Liquids do not have a fixed shape but will always conform to the bottom of the container they are in.
NO
I think you are talking about evaporation.yes shape effects a lot if container has a narrow surface, evaporation is slow and vice versa, to understand this let us take an example.take a glass full of water and put this water in a flat dish. now refill the glass and put both containers in air. What do you think which will evaporate soon? of course from the dish because of more surface area.
No. the density is a characteristic of the liquid itself and not dependant on the container holding the liquid. Think of it this way: would the boiling point of a liquid change with the shape of a container? Another thought: think of a very rich, dense chocolate cake, as opposed to a very light angel food cake. You can have a very thin slice of the chocolate cake, or a ridiculously decadent slab. both pieces have the same quality of denseness, even if one is much more fun to eat.
Yes, a gas will take the shape and volume of its container as it fills the space available to it. Gas molecules are free to move and expand so they will evenly distribute themselves to fit the container.
Evaporating the water will not remove any of the salt. Only the water molecules will evaporate. The salt will stay in the container.
Liquid is much more tangible than ice if that's what your asking....
Solids: they have fixed shape and fixed volume. They cannot be compressed much. They cannot flow. They do not fill their container completely. They have high density. They are heavy. Liquids: they have fixed volume but not fixed shape they take the shape of their container. They cannot be compressed much. They can flow. They do not fill their container completely. They have moderate to high density. Gases: they do not have fixed shape and volume. They can be compressed easily. They can flow. They fill their container completely. They have very low density.
The amount of substance a container can hold depends on the volume or capacity of the container. This can be measured in liters, milliliters, gallons, or any other unit of volume. The container's size and shape will determine its capacity.
It is unknown how much roughly squared teak logs can be loaded into a 20 foot container. In order to figure out the volume of the container you need to know the shape of the container and all the dimensions. It is unclear if 20 feet is referring to the diameter, length, or height.
Liquid have no fixed shape as they confirm to the shape of the container that holds the liquid. Liquids do have a fixed volume. Liquids are difficult to compress, not as much so as a solid matter but not as easy to do so as a gas.