No, the density is different.
They will both have the same density, but have different volumes.
Comparing density
The density an object depends not only on the mass but also its volume i.e. D=M/V. Therefore, if two objects had the same mass and volume then they would have the same density. By contrast, if two objects had the same mass but different volumes then they would not have the same volume. In fact, the object with the least volume would be more dense or would have would have a greater density.
Density is mass per volume. Density of gas is mostly the same in mol/volume. The molecular mass play large role in the different of density. Weak intermolecular force and interaction among different species of gases may give extra additional to the different in density of mix gas but at very small fraction.
Density represents mass per volume and so when homogeneous (and incompressible), an amount increase/decrease does not change density, as the mass and volume change in the same proportioning. Water density is 8.34#/cu ft, whether it is 2 cubic feet or 4 cubic feet.
yes they do because it can float up
no
yes, density stays the same regardless of amount
Density isn't determined by the size of the specimen but by its mass per unit of volume. An oak branch has the same density as the whole tree it came from--the weights are vastly different, but density is the same.
Not necessarily. Density is mass divided by volume. Many different things could have the same density.
Different objects have the same density if they're made of the same substance.Density is a property of the substance, not the object.
You are confusing density with weight. Two pieces of wood of the same density but different sizes have different weights. Density, you could say, is like hardness. If you take a 6 foot piece of wood, and cut 2 feet from it, the two pieces of wood are definitely different weights but the same hardness. Since they came from the same original piece of wood, they almost have to be the same density. There are some types of wood that have such high density that they will not float on water.
Plenty of food
Density reason is that the density of a uniform material is constant Density is independent of the size and shape of the sample.
No, they will not, unless they are the same material. Every material has a different density, and mass = density x volume
No, Internet Protocol permits packets to follow any route. The same packet may attempt to take multiple different routes and whichever arrives first is accepted and later copies of the same packet are discarded.
pure water has the same density, and the same mass