It won't change. Density is volume divided by mass, so if volume doesn't change, density doesn't change unless you change the mass of the object.
In a simple way, since density = mass /volume, the density of an object can be changed by changing either mass or volume of an object .
Their masses are different. (Mass = density * volume)
Mass and Volume are physical properties that can bed measured. By themselves, neither can bed used to identify unknown objects or substances. However, if you have measured the mass and the volume of an object, you can calculate its density.
If the mass stays the same, then when an object gets larger, its density decreases. The larger density=the more bouyancy
Compare their weights on scale's have to select scales depending on the size of the objects to find a objects density divide the objects mass by its volume.
It is unchanged. The density is the mass divided by the volume, and as both of these numbers are halved the density does not change.
With constant mass, a decrease in volume will increase the the density. Conversely, an increase in volume will decrease the density.
An objects density is determined by its' weight and volume.
An objects density is determined by its' weight and volume.
Density is mass divided by volume. So: Density= mass/volume
The density changes with different objects as all have different mass and volume(the space an object occupies) and the more compressed(Compact) the object is the more density it has.
Volume is extensive because it depends on the amount there is unlike an intensive property such as density because and objects density will never change no matter how much there is of it.
density is mass divided by volume
mass divided by volume... mass/volume=density
mass divided by volume gives the density(M/V=Density)
Density
Density = mass / volume. So if the volume changes, the density will obviously also change.