To determine the mass of water inside the container, you would need to know the volume of the water and its density. The mass can be calculated using the formula: mass = volume x density.
You can measure its dimensions, then calculate the volume from a formula for the specific shape of the container, or you could fill it up with water, then pour that water into a graduated cylinder or other calibrated measuring instrument. Or if you know the density of water in your room (it varies with temperature, and any contaminants in the water), then you could measure the mass of the container, then fill it up with water and measure the mass again. Subtract the mass of the container and then divide by the density to determine the volume. Density of pure water is approximately 1 gram/cm3.
Yes it does. We know this because if you have a pump that is filled to the brim with water and try to pump, you will be incapable of doing so.
To estimate the volume of water, you can use the formula for volume: Volume = Length x Width x Height. Measure the length, width, and height of the container holding the water, then multiply these measurements together to get the volume. If the container is irregularly shaped, you can use the water displacement method by submerging the object in a known volume of water and measuring the increase in water level.
You don't need a formula, which is lucky, because there isn't any.All you have to know is the volume of the container it's in.Gas always expands to fill the entire volume of the container.
A beaker, flask, or graduated cylinder. You have to put water in the container, record the volume, then place the object in the container and calculate how much the volume of the water raised.
Weight vs volume. PLace object in container already full of water. Measure volume of liquid displaced. weight object. weight divided by volume equals density
First, calculate the volume. Volume = pi x radius squared x height. When you know the volume, you can multiply that by water's density. You must be sure your units are consistent, however. If your volume calculation is in cubic inches, then you must know the mass density of water in, say, ounces per cubic inch. If your volume is in liters, then your density units should be in kilograms per liter. Water has a density of 1000 kg/m3 or one kg/L or one g/mL or 62.4 lb/ft3 or 8.35 lb/gal or 1.04 ounces per fluid ounce.
Water displacement method will work fine with molecules that do not dissolve... Here you have something that will dissolve in water, changing it's density. What I would do is to weight a graduated container, put some sugar (more you add, more precise will be the result) in the container... Better weight the container before... Weight the container after. Now you know the *weight* part of the answer, then you melt it, in that container... you read the *volume* part of the answer. put the part together to have a density which is mass/volume g/cm³ for example, or g/mL, which is the same.
length: ruler volume: i dont know the name of this process. put it into a container with certain amount of water and measure the increase of water level. the volume is the base area of the container multiplies the increase of water level temperature: thermometer mass: balance (most preferably an electronic one)
The exact volume of water cannot be determined because we don't know how deep or high the container is but it would have a surface area of 396 ft2.
You would use the water displacement method. Place an overflow can in a container that can catch the water that flows out of the can. Fill the can completely full of water. Place the figure in the can, and collect the water that flows out of the can. Measure the water that overflowed with a graduated cylinder, and that will give you the volume of the figure in mL. Since 1mL exactly equals 1cm3, you can also know the volume of the figure in cm3.