That depends on how much butter is melted. However, due to the law of conservation of mass, the weight of the melted butter, granted you don't spill it, should be the same.
Errors in any experiment like the one your question is asking could be accidental spilling or removal of some of the butter or, if you really heat it up, some could actually evaporate.
When 5 grams of gold is melted, the mass remains the same. Melting gold is a physical change that only affects its state from solid to liquid without changing its chemical composition.
No, a candle does not lose mass when melting down. The wax that is melted simply changes from a solid to a liquid state, but the total mass of the candle remains the same.
Each liquid has a different mass, depending on how much of the liquid is there.
By conservation of mass, the mass of H2O before and after melting is the same. You may think that E = mc^2 so as energy increases, so should the mass. That is because the energy is supplied continuously from the surroundings or the heat source.
First, we need to find the mass of the liquid by subtracting the mass of the empty bottle from the total mass. The mass of the liquid is 5.760g - 4.570g = 1.190g. The density of the liquid is then calculated by dividing the mass of the liquid by its volume: 1.190g / 3.360mL ≈ 0.354 g/mL.
When solid iron (like a block) is melted, it transforms into its liquid state without a change in mass. So, 50g of solid iron would produce 50g of liquid iron when melted.
No, when gold is melted it does not weigh less. Its mass remains the same, but its volume may change depending on its state (solid or liquid).
When 5 grams of gold is melted, the mass remains the same. Melting gold is a physical change that only affects its state from solid to liquid without changing its chemical composition.
No, a candle does not lose mass when melting down. The wax that is melted simply changes from a solid to a liquid state, but the total mass of the candle remains the same.
No light has no mass its only an energy. There would be no way to capture it. Therefore light can not be melted. <><><><><> Actually, light does have mass, but that has nothing to do with whether or not it can be melted.
One ounce. No mass is lost in the phase change from solid to liquid wax.
1 tablespoon of butter equals 14.18 grams. 4 tablespoons of butter equals 56.7 grams. However, tablespoons measure volume and grams measure mass. This measurement will change based on what you are measuring.
No, the density of gold remains the same when it is melted into liquid form. Density is an intrinsic property of a substance that depends on its mass and volume, which do not change during a phase change like melting.
119 grams of ice would produce 119 grams of liquid water when melted because the mass remains the same during a phase change.
1 tablespoon of butter is equal to approximately 14.18 grams of butter mass, so 10 tablespoons of butter would be equal to approximately 141.75 grams of butter mass.
The relative density of butter can be determined by dividing the mass of a given volume of butter by the mass of an equal volume of water at a specified temperature. The resulting ratio will give you the relative density of butter in comparison to water.
Each liquid has a different mass, depending on how much of the liquid is there.