Yes. Higher Temperature= Low viscosity Lower Temperature=High viscosity
As a substance's temperature rises, so will its viscosity. Likewise, as a substance becomes colder it will become less viscous.
Its viscosity affects the speed of its flow. If it had a low viscosity, then its flow would be much faster and hence more menacing to the environment.
No, it is actually density that affects how much of a liquid is displaced when something is put in it. It is a common misconception that viscosity and density are the same thing, but the fact is, substances of the same density can have entirely different viscosities.
honey has high viscosity lah, and water has low viscosity. anything that resists flow has high viscosity...lah. honey has high viscosity lah, and water has low viscosity. anything that resists flow has high viscosity...lah.
The Si unit for viscosity is Pa·s = kg/(s·m).
Speed, shape and frontal cross-section. Viscosity, texture, friction, gravity, velocity, size, and shape can all affect air resistance.
No the temperature doesn't the size does.
The higher the silica the higher the viscosity.
Pressure and temperature are the two factors that affect flow and viscosity. Viscosity refers to the resistance of a liquid to the shear forces.
The two main factors that affect viscosity are temperature and silica content. Higher temperatures lower viscosity while higher silica content increases viscosity.
The viscosity decrease increasing the temperature.
denser liquids tend to have more viscosity
Heat decreases viscosity. Lower viscosity means thinner like water. An example of higher viscosity would probably be honey.
it affects the viscosity because the liquid changes the shape and turns it to a gas and the viscosity by change the form
High temperature=low viscosityLow temperature=high viscosity
High temperature=low viscosityLow temperature=high viscosity
tuyrghkir7h
Yes. Slightly.