No, it must be g/cm or g.cm-1
Density is usually measured in g/cm3.The international standard unit for density is kg/m3
g/cm^3
The density of a material is defined as its mass per unit volume, density = m/v (mass/volume) One unit for this is grams/cm3. The weight is 12 g, and the volume is: v = 3 cm x 2 cm x 1 cm = 6 cm3 plugging in: density = m/v = 12 g/6cm3 = 2 g/cm3
grams divided by centimeter cubed or g/cm^3 MAKE SURE THAT THE THREE IS WRITTEN AS AN EXPONENT
density = mass/volume = 241 g / 27.7 cm³ ≈ 8.7 g/cm³
Density = g / Cm Assuming g is in a unit of mass, and Cm is in a unit of volume, If these are not the units of the quantities given then the result will not be density, instead it will be gibberish! The units of the quantities going into an equation are more important than the values.
density = mass/volume Any unit for density should have a mass unit over a volume unit. Some examples include: kg/m3, g/cm3, g/mL.
Density is usually measured in g/cm3.The international standard unit for density is kg/m3
g/cm^3
Density = g / Cm Assuming g is in a unit of mass, and Cm is in a unit of volume, If these are not the units of the quantities given then the result will not be density, instead it will be gibberish! The units of the quantities going into an equation are more important than the values.
The density of a material is defined as its mass per unit volume, density = m/v (mass/volume) One unit for this is grams/cm3. The weight is 12 g, and the volume is: v = 3 cm x 2 cm x 1 cm = 6 cm3 plugging in: density = m/v = 12 g/6cm3 = 2 g/cm3
the mks unit is kg/m cube and the cgs unit is g/cm cube
Density can't be in cm ---- it's in g/cm cubed
density = 0.92 g/cm^3 = 12.718 g/in^3 (1 in = 2.4 cm) vol = 1 in^3 mass = density x vol = 12.718 g
'Density' is not a unit at all. Density is how tightly atoms in an object are packed together. Therefore, density isn't a new unit, or a unit at all for that matter. The SI units of density are kg m-3. It common use the cgs unit g cm-3 is much more prevalent.
kilogram The SI unit for density is the kilogram per cubic meter (kg/m3). For many situations, however, this as an inconvenient unit, and we often use grams per cubic centimeter (g/cm3) for the densities of solids and liquids, and grams per liter (g/L) for gases.
Earth's density: 5.515 g/cm^3 Sun's density: 1.408 g/cm^3