Yes. Density is affected by pressure and temperature. So of course, water from a hot spring would have different density than water in colder regions of the world. Also, water from different depths would have different densities.
Question-location is a matter of "where it is". Place is a matter of "what it is like"
If you are using weight for measurement, it does not matter whether it is snow or water. It will still weigh the same. If you measure by volume, the density of snow varies, whereas the density of water is constant.
For pure water at standard temperature, the density is 1, and the quantity doesn't matter.
lithosphere is created at the location of 3,000ft. in density.
Density is a characteristic of a given material. Water, for example, has a certain density (which is somewhat dependent upon temperature but let's say that the temperature is constant). It does not matter how much water you have, it will all have the same density. One teaspoon has much less mass, but the same density as an entire ocean.
The density of all water is 1, no matter the amount or location. Humans have the density of 0.9, so humans barely float in all bodies of water.
1g/mL Density is an intensive property so no matter the amount of water, its density is always the same.
Density and Water.
no. the density of an object is alone no matter how much you have it is still the same if i have a glass of water its density is 1 if i have an ocean of water its density is 1
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.
If the object or matter has a density lower than water does.
The density of the solid.
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.
At standard pressure and temperature the density = 1.0.
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.
Density: Solid > Liquid > Gas most of the times However, in some cases like water: Liquid > Solid > Gas
The density of water is 1 gram per cubic cm. It doesn't matter how much water you have - each cubic cm of it weighs 1 gram.