(Italics, mine)hehehehehehe....(lp)!
Checked with? A baking measuring cup or a proper lab cylinder with the liquid at 20C?
Some volumetric glassware bears the label "TC 20°C" which stands for "to contain at 20°C." This means that at 20°C, that flask will have precisely the volume listed inside it. If you were to pour out the liquid, you would need to get every drop out of it to have that volume.
Alternatively, some volumetric glassware bears the label "TD 20°C" which stands for "to deliver at 20°C." This means that at 20°C, precisely the volume listed will leave it when the contents are allowed to drain out of the vessel. It is not necessary to get every last drop and, in fact, it is inaccurate to blow the last bit out of a volumetric pipet.
You'd best stick to sorting green from clear and and calling your mom your girlfriend.
Neither specific gravity or mass apply to measuring the volume of milk which is a compound and not just a liquid.
Your reading comprehension is marginal at best. I was measuring naphtha in a milk jug not measuring milk or water.
Doesn't temperature affect the volume of a liquid? and a lighter density liquid like gasoline in a bigger way than water?You'd best stick to sorting green from clear and and calling your mom your girlfriend.
Neither specific gravity or mass apply to measuring the volume of milk which is a compound and not just a liquid.
Your reading comprehension is marginal at best. I was measuring naphtha in a milk jug not measuring milk or water.
For those so inclined to believe water temperature is going to make a significant difference in the volume of a 4L jug
https://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/water-specific-volume-weight-d_661.html
The difference between 4L of water at 4C and boiling is 39 mL or just under 3 tbsp (half a tbsp difference between 4 and 20 C). Don’t go out and buy lab equipment. Be smart. Don’t be a Pete.
Doesn't temperature affect the volume of a liquid?
Of course. That is why gas pumps have a sticker giving the volume of gasoline at a specific temperature to meet the weights and measures act.Doesn't temperature affect the volume of a liquid? and a lighter density liquid like gasoline in a bigger way than water?
That was a rhetorical question dummy.....I should have color coded it just for you!Temperature change does but as I said, 1L of 4C water and 1L of 50C water are both 1L. The mass is different and the volume will change as the temp changes.
Does sugar, fat and calcium in milk vary by temperature?Temperature change does but as I said, 1L of 4C water and 1L of 50C water are both 1L. The mass is different and the volume will change as the temp changes.