Assuming the wood has a volume of 200 cm3 and not 200 cm as stated,
its density is 120 g/200 cm3 =120/200 g/cm3 = 0.6 g/cm3
Density = Mass/Volume = 120 grams/7 ml = 17.142857... grams per ml.
The "g" means grams. So 120g means 120 grams.
12 kg
120g = 4.23oz
Suppose G gallons are used. Before mixing, you have 5*65 + G*120 = 325 + 120G gallon-degrees. After mixing, you have (5+G)*70 gallon-degrees So 325 + 120G = (5+G)*70 = 350 + 70G So 50G = 25 G = 0.5 gallons.
Density = Mass/VOlume = 120g/200cm3 = 0.6 grams per cm3
The volume should be 200 cm3, not cm2. Density = Mass/Volume = 120g /200 cm3 = 0.6 g/cm3
Density = Mass/Volume = 120 grams/7 ml = 17.142857... grams per ml.
density = mass / volume so d= 120g / 200cm^3 d=0.6 g /cm^3
Density simply means mass per unit of volume. So, 120 grams divided by 25 cc = 4.8 grams / cc (density).
mass can't be converted into volume! silly! what's the density of the dog food? 120g of light fluffy dog food will take up more volume that heavy dense dog food
120g ------ = 17.11111g/mL 7mL density = mass/volume =kg/m 3 1000ml = 1000cm3 7ml=7cm3 7ml = 0.000007m3 120g=0.12Kg density =0.12/0.000007 = 17142.86kg/m3 realisticaly though your talking about a teaspoon (7ml) of something with a mass of 120g. are you sure your question is correct because even lead wouldn't have this much mass
Mass divided by volume so 120g divided by 80cm3 = 1.5 this particular object would also sink if you put it water bc water has a density of 1.0
There are multiple definitions for density depending on the precise science or engineering application. However, density typical is the ratio of mass to volume. Therefore, you must know both mass and volume to calculate density.Density = mass/volumefor exampleD=M/VD= 120g/40mLD= 3 g/mL
1000g = 1kg 1g = 0.001kg 120g = 0.12kg
The "g" means grams. So 120g means 120 grams.
No