Density=Mass/Volume
You can obtain density by dividing mass / volume.
water
In order to calculate the density of a substance, you must know the volume and the weight of a sample. Then the density is calculated as Density = (Weight) divided by (Volume).
velocity is found by dividing the distance with time. In a second the height traveled is found by multiplying the velocity by the time taken and then dividing the answer by two.
Nothing really except that the two are connected in the scientific equation that states that "the density of a substance (in grams per cc) is found by dividing its mass (in grams) by its volume (in ccs). So a block of a substance measuring 12cm by 10cm by 5cm with a mass of 3 kilograms would have a density of 3000grams divided by 12 x 10 x 5 ccs which is 3000gms/600ccs = 5gms per cc. So each cubic centimetre would have a mass of 5 grams.
You can obtain density by dividing mass / volume.
water
Density is an intensive property because it does not depend on the amount of the substance.
Compare the density of ice at a standard temperature and the density at 0.0 o Celsius. given that density is in units of g cm-3 dividing the two densities will result in the appropriate ratio.
The temperature and the salinity affect water's density.
Its mass and volume: density = mass/volume
temperature and pressure
Temperature and Salinity.
temp and precipitation
Halving in math or anywhere else is cutting things in half, dividing by two.
A number that can be found on a calculator by dividing 36 by three and then multiplying said number by two.
Mass and Volume. The equation for density is D=M/V with D=density, M=Mass, and V=volume