Uh. No. That would be 196 grams.
10
mass = density x volume Mass = 5 grams per centimeter cubed x 10 centimeters cubed = 50 grams
You need to know the volume: Mass = volume X density
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
Oh boy. Density is the mass per volume...grams per cubic centimeter, tons per cubic yard, whatever. Water's density is one gram per cubic centimeter. An object with lower density than water will sink into water until the number of cubic centimeters corresponding to the mass of the object are below the surface of the water. If the object is 100 cubic centimeters and it weighs 50 grams, half of it will be below the surface and half above. This is buoyancy, or "floating." Cool so far? If an object's density is more than one gram per cubic centimeter, the whole thing will be below the surface of the water. Because the water can't support the weight of the item, it will sink to the bottom given enough time. If it sinks, its density is greater than water...but without weighing it, we can't say how much greater because an item with mass of 5 grams and density of 1.1 grams per cc will sink as surely as a 300-pound anvil with density of 7.2 grams per cc. It just won't do it quite as fast.
The density is 0,78 g/cm3.
8 grams/4 cubic centimeters = 2 grams per cubic centimeter
mass = density x volume Mass = 5 grams per centimeter cubed x 10 centimeters cubed = 50 grams
0.2911 centimeter
cm typically refers to the unit of measurement, a Centimeter -- 100 Centimeters = 1 Meter, 1 Centimeter = .394 Inches
-- Take an object or a sample of a substance-- Measure its mass, and express the result in grams-- Measure its volume, and express the result in cubic centimeters-- Divide the mass by the volume. The result of the division is the density of the object or substance,expressed in "grams per cubic centimeter".
The object's density is 10 g/cm3
No, the cubic centimeter is a unit of volume.
Density is the weight of an object per unit of volume. For instance, the density of gold is 19 grams per cubic centimeter. To calculate the density of an object divide the weight of the object by the volume.
Square centimeter is a unit of area, not of volume. Assuming you meant cubic centimeters, just divide the mass by the volume.
Square centimeter is a unit of area, not of volume. Assuming you meant cubic centimeters, just divide the mass by the volume.
An object will float in water if its density is lower than water which means that for an object to float, its density needs to be less than ~1 gram/centimeter^3,
The volume of an object having a mass of 100 grams depends on the density of the object. --------------------------------- and the temperature (the hotter things are the more they expand) 100grams of water with a density of 1 - at standard temperature would have a volume of 100 cubic centimeters. a substance with density 2 - at standard temperature would have a volume of 50 cubic centimeters.