you carefully poor the water into a graduated cylinder and meassure at the lowest point of the meniscus.
It depends on what type of volume you are looking for. If its liquid volume, then measure at the rim of the water. If its solid volume then fill the glass up to, well, 5 and slowly put the object in it. Lets says the water went up to 8. Then the volume would be 3.
fill a glass (or any container large enough) with water, then drop the object gently in the glass. However much water is displaced (overflown out of the glass), that is the volume of the object in its place.say the amount of water displaced weighed 10g10g = 1cl1cl = 10cm^3Therefore the object displaced 10cm^3 of water, making that its total volume.
water displacement
no your can't. * * * * * You cannot find it using a formula but it can be measured. One way would be to submerge the object in water (or other liquid) and measure the volume of liquid displaced. That will be equal to the volume of the object.
The volumes of small irregular solids are usually easily measured by measuring the volume of fluid displaced when they are immersed in a liquid. For example: You would have to put the object in a measuring glass with water in it. (~1/3 filled) Put the object in it and then get the number from the measuring glass (beaker etc. mostly beaker) and that is how you measure a irregular solid!
meter
by submerging it into a glass of water that has measurement lines and taking the difference between the original amount of water and the water with the object in it.You would use water displacement to find the volume of an irregular object.
Find its mass using a beam balance,and volume by a measuring can full of water,and divide both to get volume
Place a rock in a container, add water, and record the volume.Pour an unknown amount of water into a glass container, add the rock, and note the water level; the unknown amount of water plus the weight of the rock is the volume of the rock.Pour a known amount of water into a glass container, add the rock, and note the new water level; the difference in water levels is the volume of the rock.Water displacement will not work.
It depends on what type of volume you are looking for. If its liquid volume, then measure at the rim of the water. If its solid volume then fill the glass up to, well, 5 and slowly put the object in it. Lets says the water went up to 8. Then the volume would be 3.
fill a glass (or any container large enough) with water, then drop the object gently in the glass. However much water is displaced (overflown out of the glass), that is the volume of the object in its place.say the amount of water displaced weighed 10g10g = 1cl1cl = 10cm^3Therefore the object displaced 10cm^3 of water, making that its total volume.
a way is you can use Archemedes principle and fill a glass of water bigger than the cylinder to the top. then place the glass in a bowl. carefully place the cylinder in the glass and make sure you submerge the whole cylinder.take the bowl with the water in it and pour it into a measuring cup and see how much water it is. that will be the volume of the cylinder.
You need the mass of the milk in the glass. Then: d = m/V
*Weigh the empty glass ( For Accurate Result - Dry the Glass in a Drier to remove moisture and then weigh) * Fill it with water and Weigh * get the Exact weight of the water ( whatever level the glass may be filled) *Use relationship b/w Voulme,Mass and Density of Water @ Temperature to find out the Volume of the water U filled up! Volume = Density * Mass will give u exactly what u want !
using water displacement method
Use volume displacement method.
When you are trying to find the volume of an irregularly shaped object.