No, Density is directly proportional to mass; Density increases as the mass increases, density decreases when mass decreases. Density is inversely proportional to volume; Density decreases when volume increases, density increases when volume decreases.
"High density" means that a large mass is crammed into a small volume.
Mathematically, density is mass divided by volume (m/v). For m/v to express a large number, the numerator (mass) has to be large and the denominator (volume) has to be small.
(under specified temp and pressure )
density=mass/volume
therefor,
density is directly proportional to mass and inversely to volume
so at specified condition the question is meaning less because when subatance have low density then its volume is large and mass is small and large mass can be fitted but to small volume and small density the temp must be raise as saturated sol. of sugar in water
Yes. The denser a substance is the more matter is contained within a given space.
Density measures the mass of an object divided by the volume it occupies. A dense material has a high mass to volume ratio.
No. They have higher mass but same volume as any other substance. Density is mass per unit volume
no, density of a substance increases as its volume of a decreases
Dont ask me i dont know
It would be very dense.
this is a molecule carrier system which transports cholesterol back to the liver for recycling. It is thought having high HDL levels is protective against heart attacks and stroke.
Yes, this is because different objects have different densities. If something has a low density then you need a lot more of it in order for it to have significant weight, so it will therefore have a higher volume. Inversely, if you have an object with a high density then very little will be necessary for it to have significant weight, so since there is less of it, it will have a lower volume.
Density is dependent on mass and volume. Density is not a fixed constant for all substances either. The measure of density is by substance based on the above factors.
The atom is not a sphere so its volume is problematic . Practically all the mass is in the nucleus, which is incredibly small compared with atomic sizes, and the density there is stupendously high.
Density is not a descriptive word but a property of materials. Therefore, a material can have a high or low density. Density has units of unit mass per unit volume. "Specific volume" has units of unit volume per unit mass, so it is sort of an opposite. No real antonyms for "density" in the English langauge... some sense of "insubstantial" might work.
Volume x density = Mass A material with high density has a great mass for a small volume.
1. It has more gravitational force exerted on other objects 2. It holds more energy than smaller objects
It will sink if its density is higher than the water's density, typically 1.0 gm/cm³. Exceptions are very small objects that cannot break the surface tension of water and objects that are shapes such that water is excluded from their interior (ships).
Because it has a high mass and volume
Density refers to the amount of mass per unit volume. Material with high density have a lot of mass in a little space. Objects with a high density sink while objects with a low density tend to float. As an example, Ice cubes are less dense than water because the freezing process traps air, forcing expansion -- that's why they float in water. lolz its too GOGOT
it can tell you about the size, shape and color of the object.
A coin
Density and solubility are size-independent physical properties of matter because their values do not uniformly increase or decrease relative to size or volume. Density is the measure of mass within a given volume, so while the size of an object does influence the density, it does not entail that smaller objects have greater density. For example, a cannon has greater density than a cup of water, even though the cannon has much greater volume. Solubility is the measure of a substance's ability to dissolve, therefore both large and small objects can have high or low solubility. For example, a packet of sugar has greater solubility than a Bowling bowl, while a large mineral lick has greater solubility than a pin.
Density and solubility are size-independent physical properties of matter because their values do not uniformly increase or decrease relative to size or volume. Density is the measure of mass within a given volume, so while the size of an object does influence the density, it does not entail that smaller objects have greater density. For example, a cannon has greater density than a cup of water, even though the cannon has much greater volume. Solubility is the measure of a substance's ability to dissolve, therefore both large and small objects can have high or low solubility. For example, a packet of sugar has greater solubility than a Bowling bowl, while a large mineral lick has greater solubility than a pin.
An objects density is the ratio of its mass to volume, m/v. The SI unit for density is g/m^3, or kg/m^3. Basically, it's how much mass is packed into the space it takes up. Dense means that the described object has a high density.
this is a molecule carrier system which transports cholesterol back to the liver for recycling. It is thought having high HDL levels is protective against heart attacks and stroke.
Volume is how much room something takes up. Density is the mass per volume. In everyday terms, how fluffy is a substance. Feathers are rather fluffy, and have a low density. A steel bar is not very fluffy, and has a high density.