The liquid curve is called a meniscus.
Beam
The meniscus.
First you put the liquid in the graduated cylinder.Then you read the volume at the bottom of the meniscus.The meniscus is the slight curve at the edges of the surface where the liquid touches the container.
A cylinder
A cylinder has one closed "cylindrical" (circular) surface and two circles at each end. ======================
it is an
menniscus
miniscus
The "bottom of a curved line" made by the liquid in a graduated cylinder could be called the "measuring line" or "reference line" in the application of that piece of labratory equipment. The curved surface of the liquid itself is called the meniscus, and we look to the bottom of the meniscus to make our reading as to the volume of the liquid in the graduated cylinder. The liquid in the cylinder "grabs" the sides of the cylinder and "pulls itself up" just a bit, and that creates the curve in the surface of the liquid. And that curve, the meniscus (which is from the Greek word for crescent), leaves us with a problem: where do we "read" the volume marked off by the graduations along the side of the cylinder? And the answer is, "At the bottom of the meniscus."
The meniscus.
Adhesion is responsible for the surface of the water in a graduated cylinder that is slightly curved at the sides.
that would be the meniscus
calibration mark
"Still That Girl" by: Britt Nicole
"Still That Girl" by: Britt Nicole
a meniscus
"Still That Girl" by: Britt Nicole
That is called the 'Meniscus.'