Want this question answered?
Be notified when an answer is posted
meters, grams, liters Density is mass divided by volume.
Length, width and height will give you volume. You still cannot compute the density unless you know the mass.
There is no definite answer to this question, as 23 litres of any two substances will have different density, and therefore different mass. 23 litres of water would not have the same mass as 23 litres of crude oil, which would not have the same mass as 23 litres of sand. In order to find the mass of your 23 litres of some substance, you would need to know the density of the substance. Once the density (in kg/l) of the substance, you can find the mass of the substance, since you know you have 23 litres of it, using this formula: Mass = Density*Volume For example, at room temperature, water (H2O) has a density of 1kg/l. If you wish to find out the mass of 23 litres of water, you would employ the formula in this manner: mass = (1)*(23) mass = 23kg Another example: Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) has a density of 1.35 kg/l. The mass of 23 litres of Hydrogen peroxide would be found with: m = (1.35)*(23) m = 31.05kg
You can't know unless you know the density of the liquid. Water, which has a density of 1 g/mL, would have a mass of 3.785 kg in 3.785 liters. Liquids that are more dense would weigh more, liquids that are less dense would weigh less.
cc (cubic centimeters) is a unit of volume, not of mass. The results vary for different substances, depending on the density of the substance.cc (cubic centimeters) is a unit of volume, not of mass. The results vary for different substances, depending on the density of the substance.cc (cubic centimeters) is a unit of volume, not of mass. The results vary for different substances, depending on the density of the substance.cc (cubic centimeters) is a unit of volume, not of mass. The results vary for different substances, depending on the density of the substance.
Density is mass divided by volume.
Density= mass/volume
-- Measure its mass and volume.-- Divide (mass) by (volume).-- The answer is its density.
There is no answer. You cannot convert units of mass to units of volume. If the density of the substance in question is known then one can interpolate an answer, but 2.2lbs in Litres does not compute.
divide its mass by its volume
meters, grams, liters Density is mass divided by volume.
Density= mass/volumeDensity=820g/350cm3Density= 2.34g/cm3
Pounds are a unit of mass, and liters of volume. You can't convert one to the other without knowing the density of the material being measured.
the density of an object thats has a mass of 0 grams and a volume of 6 liters is 36 g/l
Length, width and height will give you volume. You still cannot compute the density unless you know the mass.
The idea is to divide the mass by the volume. If, for example, the mass is in kilograms and the volume is in liters, then the density will have the units kilogram/liter.
There are approximately 1.04 liters in one kilogram.