balance scale need to put on the weight on the opposite and triple beam balance just need to slide the weight on
you use a balance
The bean-shaped energy supplier you are referring to is likely an organ called the kidney. The kidneys play a crucial role in filtering waste and excess fluids from the blood to form urine, helping to maintain a balance of electrolytes in the body.
The kidney is the bean-shaped organ responsible for filtering blood to remove waste and excess fluid, while also regulating electrolyte balance and producing hormones to support red blood cell production and blood pressure control.
The volume of a small bean can vary depending on its type and size, but on average, a small bean may have a volume of around 1-2 cubic centimeters.
Each bean typically contains about 3-4 calories, depending on the type of bean. This provides the body with energy from carbohydrates, protein, and fiber.
you place it on the scale
triple bean blance
i am pretty sure its a triple beam balance
to find the mass
A triple bean balance....
the scientific tools are metersick,triple bean balance,ruler,and a meaering tobe
you use a balance
lol the triple BEAM balance is the scale with the silver plate at one end and the weights that you slide back and forth on a ruler to determine the weight of whatever is placed on the silver plate.
Its function is like any other balance; you use it to measure out a certain quantity of material based on mass. The three 'beams' have masses on them so when the balance is at equilibrium, the mass of the unknown material can be deduced.
When you use a triple beam, the measurement used is the gram. This instrument is for the precise measurement of an object's mass in either a physics or a chemistry laboratory.
A triple-beam balance is an instrument for measuring the mass of an object to a generally useful level of precision. It compares the object's mass to the triple beam balance's standardized calibrated mass through the manipulation of the balance's three masses (of 3 scales such as hundreds, tens and singles of grams), each along its own beam (three masses = three beams; thus, 'triple beam'). Mass is a very useful measurement for a variety of applications, including medicine and biology (to measure how much mass an organism -- including a person -- has, and by measuring and comparing triple beam balance measurements over time, whether that organism is getting heavier/fatter or thinner/losing weight).
Manure and water