No, intensive properties are independent on mass of the system.
Not really. Intensive means that it does not depend on the quantity of mass in the system. Extensive means that it DOES depend on the quantity of mass in the system. It's a binary choice - either it does or does not - either it's extensive or it's intensive.
Intensive properties of matter are independent of the amount of substance present, such as density and temperature, while extensive properties depend on the amount of substance, like mass and volume. Intensive properties are helpful in identifying substances regardless of their quantity, whereas extensive properties scale with the size of the system.
An intensive property of a thermodynamic system is a property that is independent of the system's size or quantity. Examples include temperature, pressure, and density. These properties are useful for comparing and characterizing different systems regardless of their size.
No matter what size a sample is, if is hard, it will still be just as hard. This means that hardness is an intensive properties. Intensive properties do not matter what size of sample is being used. Extensive properties will change if sample size is changed.
Examples are temperature, color, hardness, melting point, boiling point, pressure, molecular weight, and density. Because intensive properties are sometimes characteristic of a particular material, they can be helpful as clues in identifying unknown substances.
Pressure is an intensive property. Perhaps intuition would say it should be extensive (dependent on the size of the system), but if you think about it, you can have two systems of totally different size (and even composition) which both have the same pressure - so it is clearly independent of system size. Sometimes people get confused because if you take a fixed system and start changing other extensive properties like the amount of mass in the system, the pressure can change.
An example of an intensive property is density. Density is a characteristic of a substance that does not depend on the amount of the substance present. It remains the same regardless of the sample size.
In thermodynamics, intensive quantities do not depend on the size of the system. For example temperature and density are size-independent, intensive quantities.Extensive quantities, on the other hand, are proportional to the size of the system: volume is an obvious one, internal energy and entropy are others.A quick mental test is this: if I were to double the system's size by joining it to a duplicate of itself, would the relevant quantity remain the same or double? If it stays the same it is intensive, otherwise it is extensive.
dependent
Intensive properties do not depend on the matter's amount of the physical system (mass density, temperature ...). Extensive properties do depend on the amount of matter that is present (volume, mass and size).
No, temperature is not an extensive property; it is an intensive property. Extensive properties depend on the amount of substance present, such as mass or volume, while intensive properties remain the same regardless of the quantity of material. Temperature reflects the average kinetic energy of particles in a system and does not change with the size or extent of the system.
I am not really sure what you are asking, but a dependent system is a system that has a variable for an answer, therefore the answer can be any real number and the system has a infinite number of answers. Hope that helped