uhm, nothing except the water would go into the straw. it really isn't that hard to figure out
You can transfer water from one cup to another by using a straw or a pipette to create a siphon. Simply fill the straw with water, cover one end with your finger, place that end in the first cup, and then release your finger to let gravity transfer the water to the second cup.
If you stirred the cup of water faster, the water molecules would move more rapidly, creating more turbulence and possibly generating waves or splashing outside the cup. If you stirred the cup of sand faster, the sand particles would move more vigorously, possibly causing some of the sand to spill out of the cup due to the increased momentum and force.
A cup of water and a cup of ice would have the same volume and mass because they fill the cup to the same level. However, the cup of ice would have a lower density than the cup of water because ice is less dense than liquid water due to its expanded crystal structure.
A styrofoam cup will float in water because styrofoam is less dense than water, causing it to displace water and float.
When left in the sun, the water in a cup will gradually heat up and may reach a higher temperature than its surroundings. Some of the water will evaporate, turning into water vapor and escaping into the air.
The straw would displace the water in the cup, causing the water level inside the straw to rise above the water level in the cup due to atmospheric pressure. The water would remain at a stable height as long as the straw remains in the cup.
the egg will sinks in the cup of warm tap water.
Sand is at the bottom; water above and above water the oil.
when something looks bent when you put a straw in a cup of water and it looks bent that is difraction
The cup with the straw at the stadium at the BIG concession stand:)
straw seems at above from the bottom and seems to be broken because water bent the rays of light as the light leaves the water it is bent or refracted from its usual straight line.
You can transfer water from one cup to another by using a straw or a pipette to create a siphon. Simply fill the straw with water, cover one end with your finger, place that end in the first cup, and then release your finger to let gravity transfer the water to the second cup.
No. It's the same as drinking right from the cup. Unless your out in the wilderness and you don't have clean water, you can get straws that filter your water.
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cup, collar, glass, letter , straw, napkin
If you stirred the cup of water faster, the water molecules would move more rapidly, creating more turbulence and possibly generating waves or splashing outside the cup. If you stirred the cup of sand faster, the sand particles would move more vigorously, possibly causing some of the sand to spill out of the cup due to the increased momentum and force.
As some of the water passed its temperature of vaporization and turned to steam, steam pressure inside the cup would steadily increase, and would eventually exceed the structural integrity of the cup, whereupon the experiment would suddenly and catastrophically metamorphose into a dangerous mess.