The answer is the VOLUME
"Density" is defined as mass per unit volume (mass / volume). If you compare for example 1 cubic centimeter of each, the substance that has more mass (for that cubic centimeter) is said to be more dense.
Mass is the amount of matter, volume is the amount of space, and density uses both, it is mass / volume.
matter is what has volume and mass also occupies space. It exists in three state namely: solid- has mass, volume and shape, Liquid- has volume and mass, and Gas- has volume and mass too.
density is mass divided by /volume so mass is density times volume
No. It cannot be. Mass cannot be measured in cm3, which is a measure of volume.
the extensive properties of sugar : 1. mass, 2. volume, 3. weight.
I have absolutely NO idea!
Density = Mass/Volume = 3.18/2 = 1.59 grams per cm3
percent concentration = (mass of solute/volume of solution) X 100 To solve for mass of solute, mass of solute = (percent concentration X volume of solution)/100 So, mass of solute = (10% X 100mL)/100 = 10g
Mass = Density x Volume Density = Mass/Volume Volume = Mass/Density
The volume of the resulting solution is actually increased. As a rule of thumb the extra volume is about 60% of the kg mass taken in litres.Example: 1 L water + 1 kg sugar will take 1 L + 0.60L = 1.6 L(with total mass of 2 kg solution)
The mass of both solute and solvent are conserved (sugar water weighs the same as the sugar plus the water), the volume of the solution increases less than the dry volume of the sugar, so the density of the solution is higher than water.
yes that is how you measure flower and sugar. but you are better off discussing their mass.
grams is a mass measurement and tablespoon is a volume measurement just an fyi
The answer is the VOLUME
Volume = mass / Density Mass = Volume * Density Density = Mass / Volume