No. Examples: Solid - water - noble gas
Copper has a density of 8950 kg/m3 = 8.95 kg/dm3 = 8.95 g/cm3.
Water has a density of 1000 kg/m3 = 1000 g/L = 1.000 kg/dm3 = 1.000 kg/L = 1.000 g/cm3 = 1.000 g/mL.
Helium has a density of 0.1785 kg/m3 = 0.1785 g/L = 0.0001785 kg/dm3 = 0.0001785 kg/L =
0.0001785 g/cm3 = 0.0001785 g/mL.
Yes, a list to prove it:
Hydrogen 0.00008988
Helium 0.0001785
Neon 0.0008999
Nitrogen 0.0012506
Oxygen 0.001429
Fluorine 0.001696
Argon 0.0017837
Chlorine 0.003214
Krypton 0.003733
Xenon 0.005887
Radon 0.00973
Lithium 0.534
Potassium 0.862
Sodium 0.971
Rubidium 1.532
Calcium 1.54
Magnesium 1.738
Phosphorus 1.82
Beryllium 1.85
Francium 1.87
Caesium 1.873
Sulfur 2.067
Carbon 2.267
Silicon 2.3296
Boron 2.34
Strontium 2.64
Aluminium 2.698
Scandium 2.989
Bromine 3.122
Barium 3.594
Yttrium 4.469
Titanium 4.540
Selenium 4.809
Iodine 4.93
Europium 5.243
Germanium 5.323
Radium 5.50
Arsenic 5.776
Gallium 5.907
Vanadium 6.11
Lanthanum 6.145
Tellurium 6.232
Zirconium 6.506
Antimony 6.685
Cerium 6.770
Praseodymium 6.773
Ytterbium 6.965
Astatine ~7
Neodymium 7.007
Zinc 7.134
Chromium 7.15
Promethium 7.26
Tin 7.287
Indium 7.310
Manganese 7.44
Samarium 7.52
Iron 7.874
Gadolinium 7.895
Terbium 8.229
Dysprosium 8.55
Niobium 8.570
Cadmium 8.69
Holmium 8.795
Cobalt 8.86
Nickel 8.912
Copper 8.933
Erbium 9.066
Polonium 9.32
Ununhexium >9.32
Thulium 9.321
Bismuth 9.807
Ununpentium >9.807
Lutetium 9.84
Lawrencium >9.84
Actinium 10.07
Molybdenum 10.22
Silver 10.501
Lead 11.342
Ununquadium >11.342
Technetium 11.50
Thorium 11.72
Thallium 11.85
Ununtrium >11.85
Palladium 12.020
Ruthenium 12.37
Rhodium 12.41
Hafnium 13.31
Einsteinium 13.5 (Estimate)
Curium 13.51
Mercury 13.5336
Ununbium >13.5336
Americium 13.69
Berkelium 14.79
Californium 15.10
Protactinium 15.37
Tantalum 16.654
Rutherfordium 18.1
Uranium 18.95
Tungsten 19.25
Gold 19.282
Roentgenium >19.282
Plutonium 19.84
Neptunium 20.25
Rhenium 21.02
Platinum 21.46
Darmstadtium >21.46
Osmium 22.610
Iridium 22.650
Seaborgium 35 (Estimate)
Meitnerium 35 (Estimate)
Bohrium 37 (Estimate)
Dubnium 39 (Estimate)
Hassium 41 (Estimate)
Fermium Unknown
Mendelevium Unknown
Nobelium Unknown
Ununoctium Unknown
Everything that is matter has density.
Yes
Yes.
density is mass to volume ratio of matter
The density of solid state of matter is higher than the density of liquids and the density of liquids is higher than the density of gases.
The density of solid state of matter is higher than the density of liquids and the density of liquids is higher than the density of gases.
The density is not a state of matter; the density is a property of any materials, depending on temperature and pressure. Density = Mass/Volume
everything in the universe has density because everything is made up of matter
All
In almost all cases, the matter expands. Density = mass / volume. When volume increases, the density decreases, because the mass is fixed.
Matter has got mass. Matter occupy space. The formula of density is mass upon volume. So matter has got density. So matter has to have density. That is why density is considered as intrinsic property of the matter.
density is mass to volume ratio of matter
Mass and Density
Mass and Density
The concentration of matter in an object is called the density.
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.
Density depends on temperature, pressure and purity of a material.
No, as density also depends on the state of matter in the sample of the substance.
Depends on the density of the matter to the density to the liquid.
It all depends on the density of the matter that is in the gallon.