yes it can the particles in the hot cocoa may seem to be moving a little slow but once you put heat to it, the moclecules starts to move faster and spread apart.
hope this helped :)
Styrofoam. If you use glass most of that heat would transfer to the glass and heat that up causing the hot chocolate to cool faster
Swallow it faster and don't chew!
A tall, skinny glass will freeze water faster than a short, wide glass.This is because the tall glass allows convection (cold particles in the air to transfer cold to the water particles in the glass) to take place between more particles at once due to a tall glass having a larger surface area.
Light travels fastest in a vacuum because there are no particles to slow it down. It slows down in air, even more in water, and even more in glass due to interactions with particles in those mediums.
Only the "nibs" of the cocoa have caffeine. But the traces are very small, about 0.1% to 0.5% of caffeine is found in a cocoa bean. The highest amount, 0.5%, is found in dark chocolate. Cocoa goes through a fermentation process to make it into chocolate, which also ends up reducing the amount of caffeine in it even more. Cocoa does contain caffeine, but the traces are so tiny they're not noticeable and have no affect on the human body.
Because the faster particles move (particles move faster when heated -particle theory-) the faster they bounce off each other. Energy is used to break apart the bond that liquids have (fairly tight, sort of loose) and transform them into gas particles, which often leave a damp residue on a window, glass, etc.
Hot Cocoa Hurricane glass Highball glass Note these are alcoholic
Water evaporate faster in a wide glass than in a narrower glass.
Plastic container because it is easier to wash and glass is breakable, and plastic is just the sort of thing to use for melting chocolate, not glass.
The main source of glass particles is sand. It is composed of granular material composed of mineral particles and finely divided rocks.
The main particles in glass are silicon dioxide (silica), which is a network of silicon and oxygen atoms arranged in a crystalline structure. Other particles present in glass can include sodium, calcium, and other metal oxides, depending on the specific composition of the glass.
Yes, but glass containers are not allowed on the beach.