Not enough information.density = mass / volume
If you know any TWO of those numbers, you can calculate the third one.
To get the density, just divide the mass by the volume.
Density = Mass/Volume = 21g/2cm3 = 10.5 grams per cm3
you additional need the volume
If the density of your 600.0 ml is 1 then 600.0 gramsIf the density of your "stuff" is something else then multiply the density by 600.0 to get the mass in grams.
you have to know the mass and volume of the object. density equals the mass divided by the volume. if the mass of something was 5 and the volume 1 the density would be 5
The density is simply 10 grams per litre. The bit about "a mass of 50 grams" is irrelevant to the calculation of density.
It depends! The ml is a unit of volume and the gram is a unit of mass. 100 grams of water would equal 100 ml, but 100 grams of lead would equal about 8.82 ml. This is all down to something called density and density's units are often grams per ml. How heavy something is for the space that it occupies.
Density is mass per unit volume such as grams per cubic centimeter.
Assuming the density of water is 1 g/mL, the mass of the water bottle would be 700 grams. If the density is different, you would need to know the specific density of the material the water bottle is made of to calculate its mass.
Density = Mass/Volume so Volume = Mass/Density. Having said that, density is not measured in grams so it cannot be 0.789 grams. As a result, the question cannot be answered.
Something with a density of 2.4 g/cm3.
the mass is the 50 grams you probably need the volume volume = mass / density get the density from tables