To determine the toughness of a solid, you would need to know its tensile strength, yield strength, and elongation at break. Toughness is a measure of a material's ability to absorb energy before fracturing, and it depends on a combination of these properties.
To determine the volume of a solid, you would need to know the appropriate formula based on the shape. Common formulas include volume = length × width × height for a rectangular solid, volume = πr^2h for a cylinder, and volume = (4/3)πr^3 for a sphere. The shape of the solid would determine which formula to use for calculating its volume.
- chemical analysis of these substances - determination of some physical properties
It depends what solid.If the solid is styrofoam, probably less than 1 pound.If the solid is ice, then about 7 pounds.If the solid is lead, stone, or gold, then many more pounds.
That information would enable you to discern, determine, and conclude, and confidently to state to others, which rock was created before the other, and which rock was formed subsequent to the other.
This would depend on the specific sample and its stability. Without additional information, it is not possible to determine how much of the sample would remain unchanged after two hours.
grains arranged in solid bands.
you would use the water displacement theory
you can put a solid in the shoe until it is filled to the top then take the solid out and put into a graduated cylinder to measure the capacity of your shoe.
To determine the volume of a solid, you would need to know the appropriate formula based on the shape. Common formulas include volume = length × width × height for a rectangular solid, volume = πr^2h for a cylinder, and volume = (4/3)πr^3 for a sphere. The shape of the solid would determine which formula to use for calculating its volume.
uk hjkjmyjunhj
Determine Life Safety Priorities
The change in state would be known as melting. Just for your information: Solid to Liquid = Melting Liquid to Gaseous = Boiling Solid to Gaseous = Sublimation Gaseous to Liquid = Condensation Liquid to Solid = Freezing Gaseous to Solid = Deposition
All of the information.
You would have to contact the agency that administers that program to determine this information.
most people would look it up and get that it is a solid like i did but if you really pay attention to the information that you get on it you will soon realize that its a gas
a laboratory balance OR an analytical balance OR a spring scale OR any other kind of scale
no !