actually no it doesnt
The answer is no
Temperature.
Amount (temperature) or A(t)
The density of most substances will change if temperature is increased. The amount of change depends on the difference between the two temperatures.
This mainly depends on the quantity, temperature and movement of the fluid by stirring and the amount and kind of other dissolved substances (eg. ionic strength)
It depends what the substances are.
This is called the solubility at a given temperature and pressure.
The amount of solute that can dissolve in 100g of solvent will vary as the solubility of different substances vary, but solubility also depends upon other factors such as temperature. For example the solubility for glucose at room temperature is 91g/(100ml).
There is a formula in physics ΔQ=m*c*ΔT, where m is the mass of the substance you are heating, ΔQ is the heat you supply to the substance, c is the specific heat which has a different value for different substances and ΔT is the change in temperature. If your substances are different and they have the same mass then by supplying the same amount of heat the change in temperature will be different.
The amount of heat required to increase the temperature of the substance to 1 degree greater than that of the initial temperature of the body!
i think its behaviour depends upon bonding and temperature.
It depends on the amount and the temperature.