Times the height by lenth by with
A cube.
You measure its mass and volume and then density = mass/volume.
The density of an ice cube is less than the liquid.
If the shape of the object is regular (a cube or a sphere) then the volume can be calculated from the measurement of the object's key dimension(s). And the object's mass can be determined in a mass balance. Give the mass and volume the density is calculated by dividing the mass by the volume. Where the object's shape is irregular, the volume may be determined by measuring the volume of a liquid displaced by submerging the object completely in that liquid.
equal the density of any other piece, assuming that the original cube was made of the same uniform substance.
Ice should melt faster in diet soda than in regular soda because the sugar in regular soda makes the liquid more dense. The increased density will delay the transfer of heat that causes melting from the surrounding liquid to the ice cube.
Base x Height X Length= Volume
The answer depends on the size of the cube: it could be a micrometre, vernier callipers, a ruler, a tape measure.
If the mass of the cube is 96 g, what is the density of the cube material?
No. Each piece of the cube would have the same density.
The unit for volume is the same, whether the shape is regular or irregular.
Since mass is usually expressed in grams and volume in cubic centimeters, density is expressed in grams/cubic centimeter. For solids that have an irregular shape, the displacement method must be used to determine their volume. Choose a graduated cylinder large enough to hold the object.