The measuring of density: SI standard is kg/m3. 1 kg/dm3 = 1000 g/1000 cm3 = 1 kg/L. Many people still use g/cm3 (gram per cubic centimeter) or kg/L (kilograms per liter) to measure density. Water is the reference with its highest density at 3.98 °C.
(ρ = 1 g/cm3) and the correct SI unit of ρ = 1000 kg/m3. 1 m3 = 1,000,000 cm3.
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
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Answer #1.5 :
Water has mass, and it occupies volume (space). They're both measurable.
For anything that has mass and occupies volume, you can measure the
mass and volume, and then divide the mass by the volume. The number
you get when you do that is the density.
Water has a density of about 1 kg/liter, or 1000 kg/m3. Whether you call this "dense" or not would depend on a comparison with other substances; this is much denser than air, much less dense than most solids.
Water is kind of the standard for density. It has a density of 1 g/ml. Things that have a density of less than 1 will float in water. Things that have a density of greater than one will sink in water.
No liquid has a medium density the particles and not as close as a solid but for as far away as a gas so it's in the middle of the two others !
no,liquid has a medium density .the particles are not as close as solid but they move far away from each other asa gas
No, water is intermediately dense
It is only very slightly more dense than pure water.
It will sink, it is very dense
While the temperature and pressure a substance is under changes its density, it would take very high temperature and very low pressure on water and very low temperature and very high pressure on the hydrogen to make hydrogen more dense than water. So short answer, Hydrogen is less dense than water. While the temperature and pressure a substance is under changes its density, it would take very high temperature and very low pressure on water and very low temperature and very high pressure on the hydrogen to make hydrogen more dense than water. So short answer, Hydrogen is less dense than water.
"Plastic" isn't a single thing. There are very light plastics that float in salt water, and very dense plastics that do not.
Which is more dense: water or helium? - Water is more dense, because water does not float like helium does. It is below air. That's why we have oceans and lakes and rivers.
More Dense.
Tea is water with some suspended solid particles. Depending on the strength of the tea, it may be very slightly more dense than water, because of the suspended solids in the tea. No, let's put another "very" in there; "very, VERY, slightly more dense than water".
In water it surely does. It is very dense.
It is only very slightly more dense than pure water.
It will sink, it is very dense
While the temperature and pressure a substance is under changes its density, it would take very high temperature and very low pressure on water and very low temperature and very high pressure on the hydrogen to make hydrogen more dense than water. So short answer, Hydrogen is less dense than water. While the temperature and pressure a substance is under changes its density, it would take very high temperature and very low pressure on water and very low temperature and very high pressure on the hydrogen to make hydrogen more dense than water. So short answer, Hydrogen is less dense than water.
Rice is more dense than water , while the human body is very less dense than water
Make it very cold under extraordinarily great pressure.
Yes, the weight of the object doesn't matter as much as the density. For example, a pebble will sink in water because it is very dense, yet a log won't because it's not as dense as water.
It may or may not float. It depends on whether the entire piece of wood is less dense than the water. Most wood is and will float on water. Very dense woods, such as ebony and cocobolo are more dense than water and will sink.
Water in general is not more dense in Utah. The water of the Great Salt Lake, however, is very ... um ... salty. The dissolved minerals in it make it more dense. The Great Salt Lake is actually significantly saltier than ocean water.
very very dense :)