I am pretty sure that 700mL of water will be 700 grams of water. The density of water is 1, so you use the equation density=mass/volume. You would plug everything in but mass (which you don't have). 1(700mL)= mass = 700 grams. 700 grams is around 1.5 lbs. The conversion of kg's to lb's is 1kg=2.2lbs.
The volume of water is the same as the mass of water. So if you have 100ml of water you actually have 100g of water.
Acidic ground water (rain-water that has absorbed atmospheric carbon dioxide to form carbonic acid) dissolving the limestone as it flows through the joints & other discontinuities in the rock mass.
Dissolution of the limestone by weakly-acid ground-water percolating through the joints, bedding-planes and faults in the rock mass.
The Bering Land Mass, also called Beringia.
Yes
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.
Objects float if they displace more than their own mass. This means that if when they are put into a liquid the mass (weight) of the volume of the liquid that "has to get out of the way" is greater than the mass of the object, it will float.An empty glass bottle floats in water because the bottle is filled with air, yet the bottle's shape keeps water out and the mass of the volume of the displaced water exactly equals the mass of the bottle (and the air inside).
Density of water is 1000kg/m3. Also, Volume = Mass/Density = 1/1000 = 0.001m3. So, volume of water that has mass of 1 kg is 0.001m3.
if its normal sized, it probably would be around 2 kg
Bottles come in innumerable sizes and dimensional variations. Thus, there is a not a single formula to calculate the volume of every bottle. However, volume can be calculated through instrumentation. For example the bottle can be manually filled with measures of known volume. Calculations can also be done be estimating the bottle into a cylinders dimensions of volume equaling 3.14*radius^2*height.
The volume of the bottle would be in litres.
mass of empty RD bottle is 5.8 gram.(volume=25 ml)
mass of empty RD bottle is 5.8 gram.(volume=25 ml)
Assuming that it is a half litre bottle of water, the water would have a mass of 500g so the bottle would have a mass of 95g. However it might be a pint bottle of water, in which case the water would have a mass of 568g, leaving the bottle with a mass of 27g.
The answer will depend the volume of the bottle and the temperature and pressure. Assuming that the experiment is carried out at normal temperature (20 deg C) and one atmospheric pressure, the density of water is 0.9982071 grams per cm3. So, if the volume of the water in the bottle is V cm3 = V cc or V ml, then the mass of the filled bottle is 25 + V*0.9982071 grams.
The mass and the volume of the water are directly proportional. When the volume of water increased, the mass of water increased too and vice versa. Because when we divide the mass and the volume of water, we get the constant value called density of water.
Measure out a specific volume of water, such as 100mL. Determine the mass of that volume of water. Density = mass/volume, so divide the mass by the volume, and you will have the density.