For example changing the volume of a balloon.
water turning to ice
One way to measure volume of a material is the following: Put the material in a waterproof container, e.g. a tub. Submerge the material in water, register the water level, take the material out and measure what volume of water you need to add to the tub in order to make the water rise to the level it was with the material in. The volume of water you've added equals the volume of the material.
The amount of one material in a certain volume of another material?
It is the mass in that volume. There is no special name unless the volume happens to be a unit volume on some measurement scale.
mass.
In a simple way, since density = mass /volume, the density of an object can be changed by changing either mass or volume of an object .
Liquid
Properties which can be observed without changing the material include, but are not limited to:ColourTemperatureTexture/roughnessShapeSize/area/volume, etcSmellMagnetism
Mass, volume, and density are all example of physical properties. Physical properties are any characteristic of a substance that can be observed or measured without changing the material.
changing mass and volume
It depends on what process is changing the volume. For example: the volume of fluid in a displacement experiment, or change in volume due to thermal expansion, or change in volume due to gravitational collapse (as in a dying star).
liquids
One way to measure volume of a material is the following: Put the material in a waterproof container, e.g. a tub. Submerge the material in water, register the water level, take the material out and measure what volume of water you need to add to the tub in order to make the water rise to the level it was with the material in. The volume of water you've added equals the volume of the material.
raw material cost variable cost because it change with volume of product i.e. the more you produce the more you have to purchase for raw material. Fixed cost are never change with changing in volume.Raw Material Cost is variable cost
Temperature affects substances in the atomic level. As the temperature decreases, the atoms move closer together thus changing the volume of a material. This process does not lessen the amount of material just the space it takes up.
To get the density, just divide the mass by the volume.
You can change the density of a substance by changing its volume. Density is equivalent to mass over volume. So changing the volume affects density.
There are many examples of extensive properties. Some are mass, energy content, and volume.