Density = Mass/Volume
The two factors that determine a material's density (such as that of wood) are its mass and volume.
You are confusing density with weight. Two pieces of wood of the same density but different sizes have different weights. Density, you could say, is like hardness. If you take a 6 foot piece of wood, and cut 2 feet from it, the two pieces of wood are definitely different weights but the same hardness. Since they came from the same original piece of wood, they almost have to be the same density. There are some types of wood that have such high density that they will not float on water.
the density of oak wood is 0.70 (g/cm3)
A triple-beam balance can be used. The units could be g/ml the density of a normal wood is 0.88 but a wood block in density can be anything under 1 so it can be 0.95,0.54,etc. waters density is 1 and would can float on water so wood is anything below 1.
The density of hickory wood is .89.
the density is in the middle of the wood chip
The density of poplar, balsam wood is 0.331 grams/cm3. The density of poplar, yellow wood is 0.427 grams/cm3.
field density test
Its density. Its density.
The density of a wood is 0.72g/cm3 what will be the mass off the wood with measures 30cm101010?
No. It doesn't matter how heavy a block of wood is, it depends on the density of the wood. Generally wood floats as the density of wood is lighter than the density of the water, so it would float.
Density = Mass/Volume
Not if the wood is uniform.
the density of water is higher than the density of wood... & so an iron piece sinks & a ton of wood floats...
It depends of the piece of wood itself and the type of wood that it is.
Wood varies in density.