No, the cubic centimeter is a unit of volume.
5 g/cubic cm {Your welcome!} {I am not sure if this is correct.. tell me if I am wrong!
Depends on the density.
Your question does not make sense. 200 cubic centimetres is not a measure of mass. Do you mean 200 grams? To find density you divide the mass by the volume.
No. Cubic centimeters are units of volume. Mass is measured in grams, and the standard mass is a kilogram of metal kept under the strictest conditions and tightest security in France.
6 cubic cm
Mass per volume Mass in grams volume in cubic centimeters
Mass per volume Mass in grams volume in cubic centimeters
1 gram
You put mass as the main heading then put milliliters inertia cubic centimeters Weight matter then gravity
-- 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 density is calculated by dividing the mass (75 grams) by the volume (30 cubic centimeters). Therefore, the density is 2.5 grams per cubic centimeter.
Classically, gravity is proportional to mass (stationary gravitational mass).