Place a specific amount of water in your bottle. Record the volume. Place the rock in the bottle. Read and record the new volume of water. Subtract the first volume measurement from the measurement after you added the rock. The difference is the volume of the rock.
Fill the beaker with water, then pour it into a calibrated measuring jug
A label on a bottle bought in a shop would show the volume. If there is no label, fill the bottle with water to the top, then empty the water into a measuring jar or cylinder. The volume is then read off the scale marked on the measuring jar or cylinder.
The weight of the bottle with the water minus the mass of bottle gives the weight of the water present.Mass/Volume=Density,therefore weight of the water/density gives the volume of water present in the bottle which is nothing but the volume of the bottle itself.
A graduated cylinder.
Use a calibrated measuring container.
Yes! If you heat a bottle with hot water, the balloon would grow bigger and bigger while if you put it under cold water, you would find out that the balloon became deflated again.
You pour the liquid into a calibrated container. You can use a measuring jug or cylinder or a burette. Smaller quantities can fit into a measuring spoon.
you would find it on a tipex bottle.
Length times width times height is how you would normally find the volume of a shape.
the volume of the encyclopedia where you can find the topic antennas is volume 9.
A set of scales and calibrated masses.
Density = Mass/Volume