Water will fill ask the empty spaces when you pour it into a jar full of marbles.
Either: 1) Find the radius of each marble and thus their volume through V = 4/3 x pi x r^3 and then add the volumes up. or 2) Put all the marbles in a measuring jug and fill it up to the top. Pour the water into a separate container and empty the marbles out of the jug. Pour the water back into the jug. Thus: Volume of water with marbles - volume of water without the marbles = volume of marbles
pour water into it until full, then pour that water into a measuring cup.
Assuming an unlimited supply of water, fill the 4 l. pour that onto the 9l. refill the 4l and pour that in the 9l. it now has 8l (not full) fill the 4l again pourinr carefully into the 9l leaving 3l in the 4l container. empty the 9l. pour the 3l from the 4 in to the 9l container. Refill the 4l. Pour that into the 9l (4+3 =7). fill the 4l again and pourinto the 9l leaving 2l in the 4l container. Dump the 9l container, pour in the 2l from the 4l container. fill the 4l again. pour into the 9l (2+4 = 6) and you are finished.
Fill it up with water, dry the shell off and pour the water into some sort of measuring device? Or.. Since water weighs about 1kg/liter you could pour water into the shell and then weigh the water to know the volume..
Here's a step-by-step solution: Fill up the 5-liter jar completely with water. Pour the water from the 5-liter jar into the 3-liter jar until the 3-liter jar is full. Now, you are left with 2 liters of water in the 5-liter jar. Empty the 3-liter jar. Pour the 2 liters of water from the 5-liter jar into the 3-liter jar. Fill up the 5-liter jar again. Pour enough water from the 5-liter jar into the 3-liter jar to fill it completely (this will take 1 liter). Now, you are left with 4 liters of water in the 5-liter jar, which gives you the required 8 liters of water.
When you poor water into a jar full of marbles, the water will fill the spaces between the marbles; bubbles will also appear.
The marbles remain at the bottom, while the water level rises above.
the water spills
Either: 1) Find the radius of each marble and thus their volume through V = 4/3 x pi x r^3 and then add the volumes up. or 2) Put all the marbles in a measuring jug and fill it up to the top. Pour the water into a separate container and empty the marbles out of the jug. Pour the water back into the jug. Thus: Volume of water with marbles - volume of water without the marbles = volume of marbles
they stay there
pour water into it until full, then pour that water into a measuring cup.
It will get wet and cold, which would be cruel.
Then the bottle contains a dilute juice . . . a mixture of juice and water.
If he glass was full and you put ice cubes in it would overflow strait away.
the plastic could melt! :/
the plastic could melt! :/
When we pour water onto a magnet it loses a little bit of magnetic power.