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In a set volume of any substance increasing the density increases its mass
Because -- You can have a large mass of copper or a small mass of copper, so there's no single mass that always goes with copper, or any other substance. -- You can have a large volume of uranium or a small volume of uranium, so there's no single volume that always goes with uranium, or any other substance. But ... -- No matter whether you have a lot of steel, or silver, or aluminum, or just a little bit of steel, or silver, or aluminum, the same substance will always have the same density no matter how much of it you have. The same density always goes with the same substance, regardless of how much mass or how much volume of it there is.
In general, matter is any object that has mass and volume.
Volume
Density is the mass per unit volume of any substance.
Matter generally regarded to be any substance that has mass and (usually) volume.
Anything that has mass and occupies volume is called matter. In any substance its volume can vary but the mass is its intrinsic property. Mass of a particular substance remains the same anywhere we go but that is not the case for weight of a substance.
The density is not a state of matter; the density is a property of any materials, depending on temperature and pressure. Density = Mass/Volume
Matter is the stuff of the universe, and is everything that we can (and can't) see. Mass is the amount of matter in an object (a relation to matter). Volume is how much space the matter takes up (also relating to matter).
In a set volume of any substance increasing the density increases its mass
Density is the mass per unit volume of the substance and for any "lump" of the substance may be calculated by Mass/Volume in the appropriate units.
Because -- You can have a large mass of copper or a small mass of copper, so there's no single mass that always goes with copper, or any other substance. -- You can have a large volume of uranium or a small volume of uranium, so there's no single volume that always goes with uranium, or any other substance. But ... -- No matter whether you have a lot of steel, or silver, or aluminum, or just a little bit of steel, or silver, or aluminum, the same substance will always have the same density no matter how much of it you have. The same density always goes with the same substance, regardless of how much mass or how much volume of it there is.
A physical property is any property of matter or energy that can be measured. It is an attribute of matter that can be observed or perceived. Here are 5 examples: Conductivity - Ability to conduct electricity Density - Mass per unit volume of a substance Volume - Space that a substance occupies Solubility - Ability of a substance to dissolve Mass - An object's resistance to being accelerated
In a set volume of any substance increasing the density increases its mass
A physical object ?
matter.............downright
Matter that has a definite volume and a definite mass is... a SOLID. So any solid will be a correct answer to your question.