Water weighs 8.34 lbs per gallon, so 10 gallons would weigh 83.4 lbs.
A bucket of sea water is heavier. The density of seawater is just over 1 gram/milliliter. The density of oil is less than that, meaning the same volume of each liquid has a different mass.
No, pouring out some water from a bucket does not change the density of the water remaining in the bucket. Density is a physical property of a substance that remains constant regardless of the amount of that substance present.
The salt solution in the bucket is 10% of the salt solution in the bag. The bagged solution has a higher density than the bucket solution; therefore, the bagged solution will most likely fall to the bottom of the bucket as the bucket water is displaced above it -- assuming there is no air in the bag, the density of the bag material is negligible, and the salt is fully dissolved in the water. Details: = The solution in the bucket is 0.3% while the solution is the bag is 3%. Thus, the solution in the bucket has less concentration of salt than the solution in the bag. Hence, the solution in the bucket is hypotonic to the solution in the bag.
When I was growing up on my Grandfather's farm we had many pails and buckets laying around. Pails were containers with larger bases than top openings (an upside down bucket) for carrying water and milk. Buckets were used to carry everything else. I don't think anyone makes pails anymore, since carrying water and milk are no longer a big part of farm life. No one confused a pail and a bucket where I grew up.In regards to units of measure, a pail or bucket is not a unit of measure--pail or buckets can be had in one, two, three....gallons, liters, etc. The only difference is which end the bottom is on --the small end (bucket) or the large end (pail). Now it's settled.Jack
The force required to push a 5-gallon bucket underwater would depend on the buoyancy force exerted by the volume of water displaced by the bucket. This force would be equal to the weight of the water displaced, which can be calculated based on the density of water (about 62.4 pounds per cubic foot). Therefore, you would need a force greater than the buoyancy force to push the bucket underwater.
83.4 lbs - excluding the weight of the bucket !
milliliter
A bucket of sea water is heavier. The density of seawater is just over 1 gram/milliliter. The density of oil is less than that, meaning the same volume of each liquid has a different mass.
litre
Liter. Kiloliter is much more than you'll fit in a bucket, but a bucket will have hundreds of milliliters. Meter is a measure of distance, so that's right out.
The capacity of the waterpark bucket at the new amusement park is 500 gallons.
No, pouring out some water from a bucket does not change the density of the water remaining in the bucket. Density is a physical property of a substance that remains constant regardless of the amount of that substance present.
A normal bucket can hold up to 10 litres.
It should be around 83.3 pounds
How large is the bucket? I would suggest pouring water in to find out.
The bucket has a capacity of 10 litres.(Correct spelling is capacIty)
what is the effect of placing an object with a greater density than water in a bucket of water