Unit of density is 1kg/1000 cm3 because Density = Mass/Volume
Density unit is mass / volume. SI unit for dendity is kg/m3.
Density is what per unit volume
a fundamental unit is kg or m - (also seconds, amps, candela and moles). Density is kg/m3 and is thus derived.
Mass unit: SI unit [kg] Density unit: SI unit: [kg.m-3] or [kg/m3]
In SI system, unit of density is kg/m3 But no unit for relative density as it is the ratio of density of the material to that of water
Unit of density is 1kg/1000 cm3 because Density = Mass/Volume
Density unit is mass / volume. SI unit for dendity is kg/m3.
Density unit is mass / volume. SI unit for dendity is kg/m3.
"kilometer" is a unit of length or distance, not a unit of density.
Density is what per unit volume
no
The SI unit for density is kg/m3In the CGS system, it is g/cci have no idea:P
a fundamental unit is kg or m - (also seconds, amps, candela and moles). Density is kg/m3 and is thus derived.
'Density' is not a unit at all. Density is how tightly atoms in an object are packed together. Therefore, density isn't a new unit, or a unit at all for that matter. The SI units of density are kg m-3. It common use the cgs unit g cm-3 is much more prevalent.
Density is mass/volume. So the unit of density is any unit of mass divided by any unit of volume. e.g. g/cm3.
The unit for density can be anything as long as it is a unit of mass over a unit of volume. Usually it is expressed as grams/liter.