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It depends on the diameter of the straw, which varies. Multiply the diameter by 3.14 and the result by the length of the straw.
50 feet of 2.5-inch diameter hose has a volume of: 1.7 cubic feet (12.72 liquid gallons)
Yes, freezing is change of state, from liquid to solid. Freezing is a physical change, not a chemical change.
Either. It depends on the amount of liquid to be measured and the precision required.
The liquid's density is 0.8 g/mL
The question cannot be answered. Is it about the diameter of the container from which the liquid is poured or of the cups? Is the shape cylindrical (and if so, how tall?) or is it spherical?
Assuming that the tank is cylindrical: Volume = ¶*r2*hKnowing this, the volume of the cylinder is 78.54 ft3.1ft3 = 7.48 US liquid Gallons.So... the tank will hold around 587.52 US liquid gallons.
MY ANSWER:A glass flask used in a laboratory for holding chemical liquids and solutions, which has a spherical shape for uniform heating, and one or more long cylindrical necks.
'Liquid' is a chemical term, used to mean anything in a liquid state.
A liquid is a compound or a mixture; the chemical composition is representative for this liquid.
liquid core
The premise of your question is false. Take, for example, a juice box.
It is pi*r2*h where r is the radius of the tank and h is the height of the liquid.
The closest liquid to the Earth's core that is known is magma.
Depends on what the chemical is.
Yes, transport and storage costs.
The formula for calculating the volume of fluid to the fluid container in which it is located. For example. If the container is cylindrical. Area x height = volume of liquid