Matter is anything that has mass and volume.
MATTER
Soeth
Mass is the amount of matter, volume is the amount of space, and density uses both, it is mass / volume.
Mass (measured as weight) is dependent on both density and volume.
Yes if the both are not changed proportionately, Density = mass/volume.
Both gases and liquids have an indefinite shape - they will take the shape of the container they are held in. The difference between gases and liquids is that liquids have a definite volume while a gas does not.
The answer is the VOLUME
Mass is the amount of matter, volume is the amount of space, and density uses both, it is mass / volume.
There is no unit of measure, and no mechanical device, that can describe or measure both mass and volume.
Density = (mass) / (volume) Multiply both sides of the equation by (volume): Mass = (Density) times (volume)
mass
Both
Mass (measured as weight) is dependent on both density and volume.
Any volume of non-vacuum anything has mass. Any mass has volume. Both mass and volume have an 'm' in the word. Other than that, they are not at all the same thing.
that's it. just mass and volume
The answer is "anything". Look around you, and pick any object - it will have both mass and volume.
No substance can have volume without mass or mass without volume. Milk ... and every other substance we can think of ... has both.
Actually, BOTH are used. You can define density as mass divided by volume (or mass per unit volume).
Yes, both do. Density = Mass/Volume, So density is directly proportional to mass and inversely proportional to volume.