5 mL of water vapor would occupy significantly less volume as a liquid. All gasses occupy more space than their liquid counterparts as the extra energy of gaseous states drive the molecules further apart.
No, volume can be used to measure the amount of space an object occupies, whether it is a solid, liquid, gas, or any other material. Volume is the three-dimensional space that an object or substance occupies.
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.
The liquid's density is 0.8 g/mL
The volume of a liquid refers to the amount of space that liquid occupies. It is often measured in units such as liters (L) or milliliters (mL). The volume of a liquid can be calculated by measuring its height, width, and depth, or by using a graduated cylinder.
The volume of a liquid is normally measured by means of a graduated cylinder.
The basic metric for liquid is volume, which is typically measured in units such as liters (L) or milliliters (mL). This measurement indicates the amount of space that the liquid occupies.
1g water vapour occupies the greatest volume - even at high pressure. 1g of liquid water occupies the least volume. 1g of solid ice is greater volume than liquid water - and this is the only common liquid where the solid is of less volume than the liquid state.
You cannot. Volume it the amount of space a substance occupies, mass is the amount of substance there is. Combining them will give you the density of the substance.
A measure of liquid is called volume. It typically refers to the amount of space that a liquid occupies, and can be measured in units like milliliters or liters.
A liquid is a matter as it occupies space and has mass.
Volume is how much space something takes up (occupies). Density is how heavy a standard volume of that thing is. Density allows you to compare 2 different materials.
Usually, yes. Most of the time the solid form is denser and therefore occupies a smaller volume than the liquid, but for a few substances the reverse is true.