Unless you want to limit the heat, it should be placed within a few centimeters of the flame, because the heat dissipates pretty quickly if the heated object is any higher.
The only way to 'place' water on a hot burner is when it is a solid (ice), or as a container of liquid water Naturally, the hot burner would melt it into a liquid and rapidly boid it away into water vapor (gas)
The table is moving away from you and because of the friction holding the cup in place on the table the bottom of the object will be pushed away while the top of the object will attampt to stay in place therefore causing the object to tip towards you.
it is in a still place
To find the volume of an irregular object such as a rock, you have to use displacement. If you place the object in a graduated cylinder filled with water, the volume of the object is equal to the amount of water that the object displaces. For example, if a graduated cylinder is filled with 100mL of water, and you place an object such as a rock and the water rises from 100mL to 106mL, then the volume of the rock is 6.
A reference frame? Of course, a reference frame need not be a specific object, so I'm not really sure...
It place above the the top of burner or about 3 cm above the mouth because for us to avoid the heat of the match, because if you put the match in fire it can cause light/fire.
Place the object higher above the ground
It is a little difficult to install the GE JP202DWW two-burner Cooktop in place of an existing four-burner cooktop.
It is dangerous as other people may just place their hand or other objects over the Bunsen burner causing injuries or burns, especially if it is a non-luminous flame which makes it difficult to tell that the burner is actually lit. You should always switch off the Bunsen burner before leaving to prevent injuries to others and yourself.
Heat it. Place a 300ml sample of the cold water in a 500ml beaker and place the beaker on a retort stand about six inches above a standard laboratory Bunsen burner. Turn on the gas and ignite the Bunsen burner. Allow the flame to heat the water for several minutes. When small bubbles begin to form in the water, shut off the Bunsen burner and measure the temperature.
all the above
[object Object]
the stage on a microscope is where you would place the object being microscoped. you would put the object lets just say a leaf, on the flat part with lenses above
I get strange urges to place my hand on the stove burner when it is red hot! I also get urges to let go of the wheel when driving!
Place the ruler side by side with the object. One of the edges of the object should be in the "0" value of the ruler. Then just see where the other edge is and there you have it.
a horse trailer..
Depends on the age of the heater. If you light the pilot with a match, you should be able to remove the thermocouple with the burner in place. The end that is in the flame will pull out of the clip that holds it. The control valve end unscrews. If you have a newer one that lights the pilot with a sparker, you have to remove the burner as a unit. There should be two screws holding the cover plate in place, the gas line to the burner, the thermocouple and the wire for the sparker. Disconnect all of these from the control valve and the unit slides out through the hole. Then change the thermocouple and replace.