the height of a capillary tube is not dependent on
with a ruler
Up your butt and around the corner Through you tube and out YOUR BOOB!
both hold small amount of liquid
Depends on how wide it is...a quart spread over the surface of an Olympic-sized swimming pool would be unmeasurably thin. A quart in a 1/16" diameter capillary tube would be hundreds of feet high.
Stanley was planning on telling the Warden that the lip stick tube is not a lip stick tube it is a tube
deduce an expression for height of a liquid in capillary tube. also write practical applications of capillary action.
Quincke's method is a technique used to determine the surface tension of a liquid by measuring the maximum height to which the liquid rises in a capillary tube. It involves carefully introducing the liquid into the tube and allowing it to rise due to capillary action until it reaches equilibrium. The surface tension can then be calculated using the measured height and the properties of the liquid and the tube.
The capillary tube is fixed in the Ostwalds viscometer is for passing the liquid.
It is because of the surface tension between liquid molecules and the inner surface of the tube. The meniscus height is determined by the inner diameter of the tube. The smaller the diameter, the higher the meniscus will climb due to capillary action.
The liquid was pulled into the small tube by capillary action.
In chemistry... it's a thin open-ended glass tube for collecting small amounts of liquid. Inserting one end of the tube into liquid allows the liquid to flow upqwards. When the liquid reaches a suitable height, a finger placed over the open end (towards the top) holds the liquid in the tube - for transferring from one place to another.
The rise around the edges is called the meniscus, like capillary action this is caused by the adhesion of the liquid molecules to the walls of the container. In a large bore tube like a test tube or graduated cylinder this pulls up the edge and creates a concave meniscus, in a smaller bore tube this actually pulls the liquid toward the top of the tube.
In chemistry... it's a thin open-ended glass tube for collecting small amounts of liquid. Inserting one end of the tube into liquid allows the liquid to flow upqwards. When the liquid reaches a suitable height, a finger placed over the open end (towards the top) holds the liquid in the tube - for transferring from one place to another.
Liquid rises in and out of cappilarry to compansate pressure difference. Rise of a liquid in capillary is indirectly proportional to radius of tube so liquid goes higher in a narrow tube.
This is due to Surface Tension. The molecules/atoms of the liquid are atrracted by the particles of the solid and thus the liquid rises in the capilliary tube.
Capillarity is the movement of liquid without any external forces. The flow of oil in a wick absorption of liquid by paper towel are examples of capillarity.
The phenomenon in which the level of a liquid raises or drops in a fine capillary tube.