Yes, the weight is 20 ounces, however the volume will be different
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.
The reason is because the mass is like the volume and the weight is like how heavy an object is.
The volume of a gas is not directly proportional to its molecular weight.
No,because if they have the same volume,that also means they need to have the same densities. > Density = mass / volume. Say they are different materials, such as water and iron. With an equal volume of both, the iron would be 7.85 times the weight. Therefore iron has 7.85 times the density of water.
weight is different in different gavities but mass is not, volume is not involved
weight is different in different gavities but mass is not, volume is not involved
No; volume and mass are different characteristics with different units of measure.. Mass = Volume x Density
mass, volume and weight.
They are three quite different concepts. The relationships between them are as follows:mass = volume x density weight = mass x gravity
NO, - a'pound' is a WEIGHT. -A gallon is a VOLUME. They are totally different
Weight doesn't tell you the volume. One pound of air, one pound of water, and one pound of gold all have vastly different volumes.
The question requires that you first specify the material. Volume does not have weight mass and volume are different dimensions related by density - you have to first identify the material before the density can be specified and the weight calculated.
length, volume, mass, weight, tempature, time, and rates
There are different ways of converting weight, length, volume etc.
Yes. A good example would be styrofoam and steel. The same volume of each of these substances would make for vastly different weights.
15 cubic feet of what? - Different substances have different densities. There is no general conversion between volume and mass (or volume and weight).