There's 5.5 times more mass. Specific gravity is the density of a material in relation to the density of water, so the 5.5 gives the answer.
No idea
Idk
A teaspoon is a cooking measure for a volume. It is equal to 4.92892159 milliliters or 4.92892159 cubic centimeters. The volume of a teaspoon stays a teaspoon, no matter what the density of its contents.
Hmm, well I can tell you that 1 cm cubed= 1 mL so the volume would be 1 mL.
Density of ice=0.9167 g/cm cubed Density of water=1.0 g/cm cubed
divide the density of the element by its atomic weight and you'll get the number of atoms per centimeter cubed
The density of TPE is approx 1.2g/cm cubed
2.09-2.23g/cm cubed
You cannot. Not without any information on the density (or specific gravity) of the substance in question.
5.7g/cm cubed
5.02 g/cm3
One, because no matter what, 1 squared, cubed... will ALWAYS be one!
Weight is related to an objects mass and acceleration due to gravity not its volume.
5 g/cm^3.
rr cubed is r6rr cubed is r6rr cubed is r6rr cubed is r6
Density = Mass/Volume = 150/6 = 25 grams per cm3.
Density is the quotient of mass divided by volume. Water's density is always1 approximately 1 gram / cm cubed2; the value depends primarily on the substance and its temperature. The density of something includes mass/volume units, such as grams over cm cubed or grams over mL. Its like putting inches after a number to express length. ----------------------------------------- 1Water's specific gravity is ALWAYS exactly 1, because specific gravity is the ratio of something's density to that of pure water at a particular temperature. 2The maximum density of water is the density of one cm cubed of ultra-pure water, at standard pressure, at 3.98 degrees Celsius.
2 cubed is 8.3 cubed is 27.4 cubed is 64.5 cubed is 125.6 cubed = 216.7 cubed is 343.
Inches cubed x 16.387 = cm cubed