No, it depends on the specific gravity (or relative density) of the substance. E. g. Compare the weighs of 1 cubic metres of cork and iron.
Different weights and traveling in opposite directions.
Vc is the specific volume (volume per mole) at the critical point of a substance. Vr is the "reduced volume" which is equal to the specific volume divided by the critical volume. Vr = V/Vc Many thermodynamic models correlate behavior of different substances in terms of their reduced volume. The principle of corresponding states indicates that substances at equal reduced pressures and temperatures have equal reduced volumes. This relationship is approximately true for many substances, but becomes increasingly inaccurate for large values of Pr. (Where Pr = P/Pc and Pc is the pressure at the critical point.)
One. The 'ml' and the 'cc' are identical volumes.
Other things being equal, yes; in general, no. The mass also depends on the density.
10g
Their volumes are equal. But their colors, weights, masses, viscosities, and nutritional contents are different.
A pan balance.
A litre is about 1.056688 US quarts. A litre, which is a measure of volume can be converted to other volume measures, but a litre of different substances will have different weights owing to different densities.
different equal
The answer depends on what the numbers measure. If they are the masses of equal volumes of substances, then the substance with mass 0.8 is denser. On the other hand, if the numbers refer to the volumes of equal masses of two substances, then the substance with volume 0.7 is denser.
Equal volumes may have different weights for many reasons, for instance: 1. The densities of the substances may be inherently different. This happens with non food items too, for instance a cubic metre of aluminium weighs less than a cubic metre of iron. 2. Powders can pack differently, so one may have more air spaces. 3. One substance may be damp.
substances
substances
substances
No. The international unit is different amounts for different substances; it tries to reflect the effect of the substances.
The masses are equal.The volumes are different.The values are different.
A spoon is a measure of volume. Different substances have different densities so that the same volume of two substances can have very different masses.