They do if they are the same material
Two objects can have the same volume but different densities if they have different masses. Density is calculated as mass divided by volume, so if the masses of the two objects are different even though their volumes are the same, their densities will also be different.
by using matters of different densities.
If the two solids have the same texture and color but different solubilities in water, it suggests they are two different substances with distinct chemical properties. The varying solubilities indicate differences in their chemical structures and interactions with water molecules. Further analysis such as melting points, chemical reactions, or spectroscopic techniques may help identify the substances.
not nessaserily a 1x8x8 rectangle has the same volume as a 4x4x4 cube
The general trend in densities for period 2 elements of the periodic table is that densities increase from left to right. This is because elements in period 2 have increasing atomic numbers, leading to an increase in atomic mass and a decrease in atomic volume, resulting in higher densities.
A cylinder
Not necessarily. The density of an object depends on its mass and volume, so two objects made from the same substance could have different densities if they have different masses or volumes.
A rectangular prism (cuboid) and a hexagon-based pyramid, for example, both have 12 edges. Of the five Platonic solids, an octahedron and a cube each have 12 edges.
1. Suspended solids 2. Colloidal solids (nonsettleable solids) - Do not dissolve in water
'Black holes' and neutron stars.
Generally they are two types of solids 1. Crystalline solids 2. Amorphous solids. Amorphous solids are those solids which having different properties in different directions. They didnt have sharp melting and boiling points.
No