mass= density *volume
Density of copper= 8.94g/cm3
so mass =8.94g/cm3 * 10cm3= 89.4g
10.0 cm3
10 x 3 = 30
89.6 g / 30 cm = 2.98
supposedly, the density of the copper is 8.9 g/cm
Thus, by formula, p=m/v
m=8.9 X 10
=89grams
"grams" is not a unit of density.
The density of the sample described is 89.6/10.0 = 8.96 grams/cm3.
Density: 8.96 cm3
8.9 g/cm3
d=m/v
89.6 grams
146.4 grams
Density = (mass) / (volume) = 20/4 = 5 grams per cc
Density = Mass/Volume = 1350 g/ 100 ml = 13.5 grams per ml
1 cup = 226,79 grams / 226,79 grams = 1 cup
density equals mass over volume, so divide the mass by the volume. Example: 100 grams in 30 liters= 100/30=3.3 g/L ALWAYS include a unit!
No. Grams percent is a mass-to-mass proportion whereas grams per decilitre is mass-to-volume. They will be the same if the two things have the same density but there can be very large differences if the densities are different.
The density is (the mass, in grams)/100 grams per cm3 .
Density = Mass/Volume = 10 g/100 mL = 0.1 grams per millilitre.
Density = Mass/Volume = 100/200 = 0.5 grams per ml.
density = mass divided by volume = 100/25 = 4 grammes per cubic centimetre.
density is the product of mass and volume so its density will b 100 g/cm3..
Impossible to answer. A volume is not measured in grams it is a cubic amount
Density = (mass) / (volume) = 20/4 = 5 grams per cc
Density = Mass/Volume = 100 grams / 4 mL = 24 grams per mL.
Density = Mass/Volume = 1350 g/ 100 ml = 13.5 grams per ml
density = mass ÷ volume = 890 g ÷ 100 cm³ = 8.9 g/cm³
The density of a material does not change with mass. 100 grams of a material will occupy 10 times the volume of 10 grams of the same material.
1 cup = 226,79 grams / 226,79 grams = 1 cup