mass deals with density and volume but size deals with volume only.
That depends on how much cork you have. If you have a large piece, then it will have more volume and more mass. If you only have a tiny piece, then the volume and the mass will both be very small. The volume and the mass will always change together like that, in the same direction. The only thing you can always be sure of is that no matter what size piece of cork you have, the grams of mass will always be about 0.2 times the volume in cubic centimeters.
The answer is the VOLUME
Yes it does change because its mass does not change but its volume does. When it is compressed the density will increase because its volume does. When it is attenuated will decrease because the volume does. Density is mass over volume. Remember: it only works because its mass stays the same and the volume changes.
Mass is the amount of matter, volume is the amount of space, and density uses both, it is mass / volume.
density=mass/volume volume=mass/density
No substance can have volume without mass or mass without volume. Milk ... and every other substance we can think of ... has both.
Density = (mass) divided by (volume)Mass = (Density) times (volume)
You can't. In order to calculate a density, you need a mass and a volume.
No. Volume can normally be worked out from measurements. Mass is irrelevant.
mass deals with density and volume but size deals with volume only.
No: millilitre (mL) is only a unit of volume.
Use a mass balance to find the mass then find the volume by V=mass/density.
Density rho = mass m / volume V. rho = m / V. Formula: Density equals mass divided by volume.
Volume mass area Latest correction: Of these, only volume is correct. Area is not space, and mass has nothing to do with occupied space. Two objects of different volume can have identical masses, and two objects of different mass can have the same volume. The only true statement that can be made between the two is that all objects with a measurable bounded volume have mass. That is why the only possible answer is Volume
No, liters measure volume and volume only.
A Gas should have a mass, volume, and density, However some textbooks do state that a gas can not posses a mass. A gasses must have a mass. All matter has mass. There are even so called 'massless particles' that have mass.