If the marbles are identical, the volume is the same. If you want, you can use different units and it looks like the volume is different.
That would depend on how many yellow and blue marbles are in a pack. If yellow and blue marbles are sold separately and there are the same number of marbles in a pack, buy one of each. That's probably not the case.
Yes. A good example would be styrofoam and steel. The same volume of each of these substances would make for vastly different weights.
14/42. You have to add the amount of marbles and then put the probabilityof answers you're looking for. Ex: 14 white marbles 28 red marbles 14+28=42 ?/42 your looking for the probability of white marbles, so you put in the amount of white marbles on the fraction. =14/42
Not if it is a glass marble, but you can get metal marbles which would be magnetic in many cases.
Indirect variation: the numbers of red marbles = k/the square of blue marbles, where k is the coefficient of the variation. 4 = k/202 4 = k/400 1600 = k Let the number of red marbles be x. x = k/42 x = 1600/16 x = 100 Thus, if there were 4 blue marbles, would be 100 red marbles.
The number of marbles that can fit into an empty bag would depend on the size of the marbles and the size of the bag. To calculate the maximum number of marbles that can fit, you would need to determine the volume of the bag and the volume of each marble. By dividing the volume of the bag by the volume of a single marble, you can find the maximum number of marbles that can fit into the bag.
No, a liter is a measure of volume, not weight. The weight of a liter of marbles and a half liter of sand would depend on the density of each material. The total weight cannot be determined based on volume alone.
marshmallow
33
To find the density of marbles, you would measure the mass of a certain number of marbles using a balance scale, then calculate the volume by either measuring the dimensions and using a formula for the shape of the marbles or by displacement method with water. Finally, divide the mass by the volume to determine the density of the marbles.
Oh, dude, it's simple math. You just need to calculate the volume of the room and the volume of one marble, then divide the room's volume by the marble's volume. Like, it's not rocket science or anything. Just don't lose your marbles in the process, okay?
Yes, identical objects will have the same volume because volume is a physical property that measures the amount of space an object occupies, and it remains constant regardless of the number of similar objects.
Fingerprints are different in identical twins.
If the density of one marble is 2.5 g/cm³, then the density of four marbles would be the same, as density is an intrinsic property of the material. So, the density of four marbles would also be 2.5 g/cm³.
It depends on the size of the marbles and the dimensions of the one liter container. Most likely the sand would fill the void space between the marbles and the mixture would have a volume of one liter or slighty more.
70
well it all starts with four marbles..... for mL you would do the following: for example lets use a chalkboard eraser. you would find its volume (for say 135cm3). then you would add how much the marble weighs which may be 2.26796 mL. but lets round that to 2 mL. now you times that by four which is? 8 mL!! now you add 8 mL to 135 mL which equals................................................................................................................................................................................................... 143 mL!! there you go but just to let you know if you need the answers to the Metric mania worksheet go to this website: www.sciencespot.net