Want this question answered?
Isn't it just 800 grams?
To find the density of an unknown liquid, you would measure the mass of a known volume of the liquid using a balance, and then divide the mass by the volume. Density = Mass/Volume. This will give you the density of the unknown liquid.
Density equals mass divided by volume. your given examples density is .902g/cm^3. (cm^3 is interchangeable with mL) the density of this unknown liquid is close to that of water (.997g/mL) and I therefore believe it is water.
The density is mass/volume = 30.6g/53.3ml = 0.5741 grams per millilitre.
To find the density of a liquid, you would need to measure the mass of a specific volume of the liquid using a balance, and then divide the mass by the volume. The formula for density is density = mass/volume. Density is typically expressed in units such as g/mL or kg/L.
The liquid's density is 0.8 g/mL
Isn't it just 800 grams?
Yes. This is the liquid's 'volume'. The density of a liquid is another subject: Density= Mass/Volume But this is unrelated to the space the liquid occupies.
That depends on the density of whatever occupies that volume. The general relationship is:mass = density x volumeThat depends on the density of whatever occupies that volume. The general relationship is:mass = density x volumeThat depends on the density of whatever occupies that volume. The general relationship is:mass = density x volumeThat depends on the density of whatever occupies that volume. The general relationship is:mass = density x volume
Density equals mass divided by volume. your given examples density is .902g/cm^3. (cm^3 is interchangeable with mL) the density of this unknown liquid is close to that of water (.997g/mL) and I therefore believe it is water.
The density is mass/volume = 30.6g/53.3ml = 0.5741 grams per millilitre.
In order to find the volume of a liquid you first need to know its mass and density. You can then use the formula: volume = mass / density. For instance, if you have 2 kg of water, you can find out the volume that the water occupies. Water have a density of around 1kg/liter. We then use the mass/density formula:Volume = mass / density = 2 kg/(1 kg/liter) = 2 liter.We have now calculated that 2 kg of water occupies 2 liter of space, or 2 cubic decimeter (2 dm^3).
The volume of a liquid stays the same no matter what container it is in, only the shape changes.
The density is 2,01 g/cm3 because the density is ratio between the mass and volume.
"Volume" means the amount of space that something occupies. "Density" means the mass of something divided by its volume.
Density = Mass/Volume so you need to measure the mass of the substance and divide by the volume that it occupies.
To find the density of a liquid, you would need to measure the mass of a specific volume of the liquid using a balance, and then divide the mass by the volume. The formula for density is density = mass/volume. Density is typically expressed in units such as g/mL or kg/L.