Firstly weigh it. Then dunk it in water to see how much water is displaced. This gives you the volume. The density is then the mass / volume.
Units are most often kg.m^-3
its volume can only be messured by displacement. it is difficult to equaly devide. it can be difficult to determine density if you are trying to determine the density of the material, not the object.
Gravitation attracts masses, resulting in an attractive force. In a liquid, the molecules move quickly and move out of the way of a solid object in the liquid. Hence, a dense solid object will sink if its density is greater than that of the liquid because the liquid is displaced by the object as it moves.
You wouldn't get the right reading of volume of the object, so you're density calculation would be off.
That depends on the liquid and the solid. Coal is a solid with a very low density. Mercury is a liquid with a very high density.
Density is the ratio of an object's mass divided by its volume. The standard international unit to measure density is kilograms per cubic meter (kg/m3). Whether it is a liquid or solid or gas makes no difference.
Density= mass/volume
If we know the material that makes up the object, we will also know the density of the material. By measuring the volume and mass of the object, it is possible to find out if it is solid or hollow. This will only work if we know the material and we know the density of the material.
Adding heat to the object if the object is a solid.
This is a solid.
[m][l]^-3
yes it does because the higher the mass and volume are, the higher the density would be
If an object sinks in a fluid then it has a density greater than the fluid. This assumes the object is solid and not shaped like a boat.
Then the solid object has a greater density and will sink.
It is a 3 dimensional object that has density and volume
An object float in a liquid only when the density of the solid is lower than the density of the liquid.
It floats
It depends on the density of the object you are using