They're not.
Weight is the force produced on a mass by gravity.
Volume is totally independent.
Density is mass per unit volume, and sometimes in some industries weight per unit volume is used. Weight per unit volume is also sometimes called specific weight. Weight and mass are not the same. Volume per unit mass is called specific volume, and is the reciprocal of density. It is not clear whether volume per unit weight can also be used as a measure of specific volume.
Mass is volume multiplied by the density. Volume is the amount of physical space an item takes up. The mass is the amount of atoms that are packed into that space. NOTE: Mass is NOT the same a weight. Weight changes based on gravity. Without taking atoms off/out or adding them in to the same space mass will never change.
The reason is because the mass is like the volume and the weight is like how heavy an object is.
The relationship between them is as follows. mass = volume x density weight = mass x gravity That means that, other things being equal, mass is proportional to volume. On the other hand, weight is also proportional to mass.
No, kiloliters is a measure of volume (usually liquid) and kilograms is weight or mass.
They're not. Weight is the force produced on a mass by gravity. Volume is totally independent.
They're not. Weight is the force produced on a mass by gravity. Volume is totally independent.
No; volume and mass are different characteristics with different units of measure.. Mass = Volume x Density
mass involves weight....volume is size. A ballon and a loaf of bread may have the same volume (occupy the same space) , but the bread has more volume.
Density is not affected by gravity. Density is affected by mass and volume, such that density = mass/volume. Weight, but not mass, is affected by gravity. Weight and mass are not the same thing.
Density is mass per unit volume, and sometimes in some industries weight per unit volume is used. Weight per unit volume is also sometimes called specific weight. Weight and mass are not the same. Volume per unit mass is called specific volume, and is the reciprocal of density. It is not clear whether volume per unit weight can also be used as a measure of specific volume.
mass is weight. volume accounts for size. density of items change therefore masses are not the same as volumes
Weight = (density) times (volume)The definition of density is mass/volume .Now [ weight = mass x gravity ], so [ mass = weight/gravity ], and [ density = weight/gravity x volume ] .So Weight = (density) x (volume) x (gravity)
No because elements and compounds can have the same mass and volume.
Same weight different volume
Mass is volume multiplied by the density. Volume is the amount of physical space an item takes up. The mass is the amount of atoms that are packed into that space. NOTE: Mass is NOT the same a weight. Weight changes based on gravity. Without taking atoms off/out or adding them in to the same space mass will never change.
The reason is because the mass is like the volume and the weight is like how heavy an object is.