You cannot. Volume and weight are two different characteristics and, according to basic dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
If you had the density of the substance, you would be able to convert the volume to mass. But mass is not the same as weight. You would then need information about the strength of gravitational attraction at the location to convert the mass into weight.
No. It may change its weight if weighed at varying depths.
That depends on the volume of the brick. Whatever its volume is, its weight underwater is(weight of the brick in air) minus (weight of an equal volume of water)
Bulk density = dry weight / volume, then by knowing the dry weight and bulk density we can calculate the volume.
weight and mass measures the volume
What is density?? Density = Weight / Volume. So if the density and weight are given, you can easily find the volume of diesel.
weight, volume, density, mass
If you have 100 kilos of oil in a sealed can and you cool it or warm it, the weight of the oil will not change. However the volume of the oil in the can will change.
The weight can vary because of water content. The volume does not change.
mass is weight. volume accounts for size. density of items change therefore masses are not the same as volumes
No. It may change its weight if weighed at varying depths.
No. Grains per pound is the measurement of weight not volume. The volume would be different but the weight would be the same.
That depends on whether or not it also changes volume or not, and by how much.
Volume- as in how much space something occupies- does not change. Neither does mass. However, WEIGHT is much less on the moon.
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)
Volume
Percentage change in volume= Change in volume/intial volume X 100
The weight of a millilitre depends on the density of the substance being weighed. Compare a millilitre of air with a millilitre of mercury!