Take a testube, an eye dropper, corn flake, and iodine. Take the cornflake and put it into a 200 militers bottle boil for five minutes, wait for a while then put idiodine to the starch solution, then take few droplets of snow flakes and put it into the iodine that got mixed with starch solution and there you go.
It is called a hydrometer.Also, density equals mass divided by volume.See the Related Questions to the left for more information about hydrometer and density.yup
The density of snow is variable. Wet snow or firn has a density which is almost 10 times that of freshly fallen flakes. Depending on its densit, a cubic yard of snow could weigh between 6700 poundals and 53800 poundals.
The best way would be to remove a square foot of it (assuming you know the area of your deck in square feet) and put all the snow in a container. Then you can either wait for it to melt or heat it up somehow so that you just have water. The next part is a little trickier, because you will use the volume of your water and the known density of water to get the mass of the melted snow. You'll have to measure the volume of the water in milliliters somehow and then convert to cubic meters. Take your measured milliliters and divide by a million (or if you have liters, divide by 100,000 - I honestly have no idea how much water you'll have in a square foot of snow) to get cubic meters. Now! The density of water = 1kg/cubic meter. Since density = mass/volume and your density is 1, your mass is actually the same number as the volume you got, except the units cancel out to kilograms. Multiply that by the number of square feet your deck is and you have your mass in kilograms...simple enough to convert to pounds.
Hardness refers to a mineral's resistance. Density is the measure of how much matter there is.
You can measure the density of benzophenone using solvents like toluene, ethanol, or chloroform. These solvents can dissolve benzophenone and provide an accurate density measurement.
The density of snow is lower than the density of water.
If you are using weight for measurement, it does not matter whether it is snow or water. It will still weigh the same. If you measure by volume, the density of snow varies, whereas the density of water is constant.
Density = mass/volume.
Density = Mass / Volume. There is not an instrument that will measure both so you will need to measure them separately and calculate the density.
-- Measure its mass. -- Measure its volume. -- Divide its mass by its volume. The result is its density.
density can be measured with the help of hydrometers.
It measured by the density of the size from the hydrometer.
they take some snow a sqare of snow and measure it with a machine
The density of a substance is the ratio of its mass to its volume. So, I would measure the mass and volume of a substance to calculate density.
It is called a hydrometer.Also, density equals mass divided by volume.See the Related Questions to the left for more information about hydrometer and density.yup
The density of snow is variable. Wet snow or firn has a density which is almost 10 times that of freshly fallen flakes. Depending on its densit, a cubic yard of snow could weigh between 6700 poundals and 53800 poundals.
Density is Mass/Volume. Without a measure of volume you cannot calculate density.