Heat it!
Osmium is the most dense metal of all, so for a given volume, it is the heaviest.
Air bubbles would make the volume you read in the measuring cylinder increase from the actual volume of theliquid. so when you add in the metal, there would be an increase in the volume of the metal than it really is. the mass of the metal cannot be affected by air bubble because this is the amount of matter in the metal. This increase in volume causes the density of the metal to reduce from its original value. since mass is constant, density is inversely proportional to volume. As volume increases, density decreases.hope that was helpful.
It will increase the total volume, but it will hardly affect total mass. Remember the definition of density as mass / volume.
The 500g sample of zinc metal is more dense because density is a property of a material and does not depend on the amount of the substance. Density is defined as mass divided by volume, so for the same material, the one with higher mass will be more dense.
At freezing the volume of gas increase.
It is 11.6 mL.
Since density is mass / volume, the other alternative is to increase the volume.
no density would increase, mass = volume x density if we assume that the volume of the substance cannot change then the only way to increase mass would be if that substance became more dense.
decrease the volume. that way whatever is in the solution is more concentrated, thus more dense
ml is a measure of volume and provides no information whatsoever about density.
Yes, the volume of salty water generally increases when its temperature increases because warm water tends to expand and become less dense. The increase in volume with higher temperature is known as thermal expansion.
Density is a measure of how much mass is packed into a certain volume. So, if you increase the mass of an object while keeping its volume constant, the mass is more concentrated in that volume, leading to a higher density.