No. There will always be more density (however small) when you increase the size or amount of something
Density is an intensive property because it does not depend on the amount of matter present. If you have 2 grams of copper and 2000 grams of copper, they are going to have the same density. This cannot be said for extensive properties such as volume: 2 grams of copper will not have the same volume as 2000 grams of copper.See related questions below for more information.
No density if a characteristic of matter. Density can vary with temperature and pressure, but a chunk of something twice the volume of another chunk of the same substance will weigh twice as much because the two chunks have the same density.
40.3kg = 6.3 stone
They are not the same. Density is a property of matter, namely what it weights per unit volume. E.g., the matter water weights about 1 g per cm^3.
they both have something to do with science>Density = mass / volumeIt represents the amount of matter in a given volumeRelative density (specific gravity) compares the density to that of water, which is 1 gram per cubic centimetre.Say iron @ 7.85 grams / cu cm would pack 7.85 times the matter into the same space.In physics and materials science the density (ρ) of a body is a measure of how tightly the matter within it is packed together, and is given by the ratio of its mass (m) to its volume (V). Its SI units are kilograms per cubic metre (kg/m3). It is also sometimes given in the cgs units of grams per cubic centimetre (g/cm3). Density is defined as: (ρ) rho = m / V Different materials usually have different densities, so density is an important concept regarding buoyancy, metal purity and packaging.
1g/mL Density is an intensive property so no matter the amount of water, its density is always the same.
Density is an intensive property because it does not depend on the amount of matter present. If you have 2 grams of copper and 2000 grams of copper, they are going to have the same density. This cannot be said for extensive properties such as volume: 2 grams of copper will not have the same volume as 2000 grams of copper.See related questions below for more information.
No density if a characteristic of matter. Density can vary with temperature and pressure, but a chunk of something twice the volume of another chunk of the same substance will weigh twice as much because the two chunks have the same density.
Density is an intensive property because it does not depend on the amount of matter present. If you have 2 grams of copper and 2000 grams of copper, they are going to have the same density. This cannot be said for extensive properties such as volume: 2 grams of copper will not have the same volume as 2000 grams of copper.See related questions below for more information.
Density is an intensive property because it does not depend on the amount of matter present. If you have 2 grams of copper and 2000 grams of copper, they are going to have the same density. This cannot be said for extensive properties such as volume: 2 grams of copper will not have the same volume as 2000 grams of copper.See related questions below for more information.
The density of water remains the same, no matter how much of it there is. The density of water OS 1 gram per centimeter cubed.
The density of something does not depend on the amount of the substance you have, the density of 1 gram of water is the same as the density of 100000000 grams of water. The density of pure water at standard temperature and pressure is 1.
It is useful because no matter how much you have of the same substance, it will always have the same density. The mathematical equation to find the density of matter is to divide the mass by the volume. So you get an average, the density. Water has a density of 1. However, oil has a density of something like .9, so it floats on water. That way, by just looking at the numbers, you can tell what is what.
They are the same density.
If the material is pure and homogeneous, i.e. "the same throughout", then the density is independent of the size of the sample. A chip the size of a pinhead and a chunk the size of a truck have the same density.
Density is an intrinsic property, not an extensive property of matter. This is because it DOES NOT depend on the size of the sample (amount). The density of a small piece of matter is the same as the density of a larger piece of that same matter.
The density will change if the amount of matter in the same volume changes. You can have more matter wihtout changing the density, if the matter occupies more space.