Physics, asked by guruvijay0512, 1 month ago

For a given heat in a liquid, the apparent expansion is more than that of real expansion

Answers

Answered by itzurAni
2

Explanation:

So the real expansion of the liquid is always greater than the apparent expansion of the liquid. So the real expansion of the liquid = volume expansion of the vessel containing the liquid + apparent expansion of the liquid. So the given statement is true.

Answered by Nafeeza25
0

Answer:

False.

Correct Statement: When the liquid is heated in a container, first heat is gained by container which expands and level of liquid goes down, but immediately liquid receives the heat from container so apparent expansion is liquid.

Real expansion = Expansion of container + Apparent expansion

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