No, gases do not have a fixed shape or volume like liquids and solids, so they cannot be stirred. Gases will naturally mix and spread out to fill the space available to them.
Stirred was created on 2002-04-03.
The quote "The nation has been deeply stirred by a solemn passion stirred by knowledge of wrong of ideals lost" is attributed to W.E.B. Du Bois. He expressed this sentiment in the context of social justice and the African American experience. Du Bois was a prominent sociologist, historian, and civil rights activist who co-founded the NAACP and advocated for the rights and dignity of Black Americans.
The sugar cube would dissolve faster when stirred. When you stir a sugar cube in water, you increase the rate at which molecules of sugar come into contact with water molecules, speeding up the dissolving process. Without stirring, the process is slower as diffusion is the only mechanism that helps the sugar dissolve.
Yes definitely, otherwise you would never have to protect your reaction for air when using sensitive chemicals! There are examples known of reactions with a gas, e.g. a hydrogenation reaction, or the construction of an acid by mixing CO2 gas through your vigorously stirred solution.
because sugar separates from tea!
It will split in a brown stinky gas and a white fluid
No, the word stirred is not an adverb.The word stirred is a verb and sometimes a noun.Click here to see a dictionary entry for the word "Stirred".
H. P. Grau has written: 'Gas-liquid mixing in stirred vessels'
Stirred is the past tense of stir.
Stirred was created on 2002-04-03.
The past tense of stir is stirred.
'Stirred vessel'? Not an expression I know.
The past participle of "stir" is "stirred."
ill have a vodka martini: shaken, not 'stirred'.
I stirred the porridge as it cooked
Shaken 'n' Stirred was created in 1984.
It is sugar that is stirred and is dissolved faster than regular sugar.