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It depends on the volume of milk. A drop of milk will have a different mass to a tankerful.
That's going to depend "heavily" on the weight of the empty pipe.
That completely depends on what's in the 12 fl oz. If they happen to be empty, then their weight is zero.
I'm not sure what you mean, but weighing by difference is when you:Take the weight of an empty container, fill the container with a substance.Take the weight of the container holding the substance.Subtract the empty container's mass from the mass of the container and the substance.You will then get the mass of the substance.The result is what is called the "Tare" weight. That is the weight of the contents ONLY .And that would not be the mass of the substance,,,it would be the weight. Mass is a determination of how much space is taken up by the substance.
The ships are not made of solid iron. They contain much empty space where the cargo and or passengers go. So the overall density of a ship: its TOTAL mass divided by its TOTAL volume is less than that of water.
Yes, milk will float on honey. Honey is much denser and heavier than milk. If you drop a spoonful of honey into a glass of milk it will sink to the bottom of the glass.
one thousand gallons will not float
Gasoline
Depends on how much you weigh and how much the weight the beer can hold
It depends on how large it is and what it is made of.
The A 380's empty operating weight is 600,000 pounds.
It's not so much "needed" as it is a physical consequence. The empty weight is the weight of the aircraft itself - without fuel, crew, passengers, cargo or weapons.
It depends on the volume of milk. A drop of milk will have a different mass to a tankerful.
16
no because buoyant means how much can an object float and weight means how much it weighs.
With that kind of low weight you're better off filling empty milk cartons with water or sand. Doing that wouldn't cost you anything.
it depends on your empty weight, appx. 3320 lb.