As Mercury heats up in a beaker, it will expand due to the increase in temperature. This expansion can cause the level of the mercury in the beaker to rise, potentially overflowing if the volume increases significantly. Additionally, as the temperature continues to rise, the mercury may vaporize and release potentially harmful fumes into the air.
When you light a candle over a cold beaker, the heat from the flame warms up the air around it. The warm air rises and surrounds the beaker, eventually heating it up. This process is known as convection.
A beaker is a glassware used to hold and measure liquids. It can typically measure up to its maximum volume capacity, which is usually marked on the side of the beaker in milliliters or liters.
Putting a beaker over a candle can create a seal that limits the oxygen supply to the flame, causing it to extinguish due to lack of oxygen. This is because fire needs oxygen to sustain combustion, and by covering the flame, you are essentially cutting off its supply.
The weight of a beaker can vary depending on its size and material. On average, a glass beaker that holds 250 ml of water weighs about 160 grams. A larger beaker can weigh up to 500 grams or more.
The water rose in the beaker because as the candle burned, it consumed oxygen in the air inside the beaker. This created a partial vacuum, causing the water to be pushed up into the beaker due to the air pressure outside.
What do you think happens when some air heats up and other air is cool?
it heats up
It heats up
it heats up
It heats up.
it heats up
The density decreases.
They speed up and moves faster and faster.
Mercury rises in a thermometer when the temperature increases because mercury expands as it heats up. This expansion of the mercury column inside the thermometer is used to measure the temperature of the surrounding environment.
It heats up and precipitates out solids.
The surface of the moon heats up.
They get in the bin with Scott where it heats up ;)