baseball basketball gumball marble
As it is a marble slab, it could be supposed that the shape is fairly regular. So multiplying length by width will give the square area of the slab. It could be that the square area is not required, and the length and width is needed simply to fit the marble slab into a recess or is to be used as a work-surface , etc. But, either way, a steel tape measure is usually required to measure the marble slab.
A marble light is a light fixture made of marble.
Yes and no. Kidney stones feel as big as a marble. But if you swallow a marble it will come out a different way
You can get marble from a quarry or a stone merchant, you can also sometimes find marble tiles at a tile and ceramic shop.
A marble has a spherical shape, and so has Mercury. But Mercury is a bit flattened at the poles, which a marble is not, so a marble is a more perfect sphere.
* A marble is round. * Spherical.
* A marble is round. * Spherical.
Spherical! Hope this helps :)
The grain shape of marble is typically interlocking. This means that the individual mineral grains in the marble are tightly interwoven or interlocked with each other, forming a solid and dense structure.
Shiny smooth white marble.
yes, a solid such as the marble, does not change its shape and does not take the shape of its container.Yes a solid will have a three dimensional shape ie length, breadth and height.
Because the marble has a lesser density than water. And also because of the marbles shape and size. :)
baseball basketball gumball marble
Its a physical, Because a sculptor have shape, size, and Color.
It all depends on what surface it bounces on.Either the ball or the surface changes shape. A rubber ball changes it's shape, but a marble changes the shape of the surface it bounces on. And if the change is only temporary, it snaps back to it's original shape, and the ball bounces.But some energy is lost in the process, and the ball bounces lower each time.Generally a hard surface will make a hard ball bounce higher, since they hardly change shape, and they keep more of their energy. So on an ideal surface a marble would bounce higher than a rubber ball, as long as it doesn't break.Check out liquid metal: http://www.liquidmetal.com/media/ball_bounce_DSL.wmvSkrommel
The Greeks would take marble or some sort of rock and they would carve it into the shape, idk how they did the tops.