Note 5cm isn't a volume it is a length therefore for the answer we are assuming the volume is 5cm3 Density = mass/volume
Density = 15g/5cm3 = 0.015kg/0.000005m3
Density = 3g/cm3 or in SI units 3,000kg/m3
Mass is equal to density multiplied by the volume. Therefore density is equal to the mass divided by the volume. The standard units of density are kilograms per metre cubed, so it is first important to convert the mass into kilograms i.e. 615 grams = 0.615 kg, and the volume into metres cubed i.e. 105 centimetres cubed = 1.05 x 10^-4 metres cubed. So to answer your question: Density = Mass/Volume =0.615/(1.05*10^-4) =5857.14 kg/m^3
Density has the units of mass over volume, so dimensional analysis tells you to divide the mass by the volume to get the density.
1655 g / 368 ml = 4.50 g / ml
density = mass/ volume
d = 615/105 = 5.86g/cm3
The volume would have to be 5cm3, not squared.
density = mass/volume = 15g/5cm3 = 3g/cm3
density = mass/volume = 15g/5cm3 = 3g/cm3
When dividing measurements, you divide both the numbers and the units.
Density = mass / volume = 615/105 g/cm3
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20g/cm
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Not enough information. You would also have to know either the volume, or the density, of the object.
Divide the mass of the object by the object's volume. For example, a 20 cubic centimeter block that weighs 40 grams would have a density of 2 grams per cubic centimeter (or milliliter), or abreviated as 2g/mL
Density is mass per unit volume. If 10 cm3 weighs 20g, the density is 2 g/cc.
Density = mass/volume. Density(A) = 40.2/5.7 = 7.05 gcm-3 Density(B) = 42.0/6.3 = 6.67 gcm-3 So B is less dense.
If it weighs 0.25 lb on Earth, then its mass is 113.4 grams. Density = mass/volume = 113.4/130.3 = 0.87 gm/cm3
Density=Mass/Volume. So D=3/2. Which is also 1.5. To the density of the object is 1.5 g/ml
density = mass / volume 1mL = 1cm3 Therefore for this example: density = 3.64/0.687 = 5.298g/cm3
Not enough information. You would also have to know either the volume, or the density, of the object.
Then the solid object has a greater density and will sink.
The relationship of mass to density is that density is found by dividing mass over volume. Density is how tightly packed atoms are in an object while mass is how much something weighs.
You multiply the volume of the desired object - the inside of your room, perhaps - by the density.
Specific gravity of oil=[Weight of object-Weight in oil]\[Weight of object-Weight in water] Take weight of object as X 0.83=x-4\x-3 X=8.882lb Specific gravity of object= X/X-3 =1.51 Density=1510kgm-3 Volume=Mass\Density Volume=4.0288\1510=0.002668m3 If there is anything wrong please let me know.Thank you!
Something that weights a lot change have a small density if it is a big object. The weight of an object is equal to mg, where g is acceleration due to gravity and m is mass. m = pv, where p is density and v is volume. If the density is small, but the volume is very big, then the mass will be big, causing the weight to be big.
Mass is how much a thing weighs, Volume is how much space it takes up, and Density is how much it weighs per unit volume and is calculated as mass/volume
By size I think you mean the volume. And no, you also need the density of the object. Which tells you how much a given size weighs.
No. Density says how much it weighs per volume unit, like kilo per liter.An example is that lead has higher density than water (weighs more per liter), but a lot of water still weighs more (is more massive) than a little lead.
Divide the mass of the object by the object's volume. For example, a 20 cubic centimeter block that weighs 40 grams would have a density of 2 grams per cubic centimeter (or milliliter), or abreviated as 2g/mL