The density should be identical regardless of the quantity, because "density" is what's called an intrinsic property; it doesn't matter how much of the substance there is.
No. That's the beauty of "density". It's a characteristic of the substance, and the size of the sample has no effect on it. As long as the sample is pure, a pinhead of it has the same density as a truckload of it.
A gram weighs less than a kilogram.
no 1kg = 1000g
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The answer will depend on the units used. A density of 1 gram per litre is pretty light (less than the density of air at STP) whereas a density of 1 kilogram per ml is seriously dense.
The sawdust. Density is the property that relates mass and volume (density = mass/volume). So the more dense something is, the less space a fixed mass of that material will take up. As iron is considerably more dense than sawdust (or any solid wood for that matter) it will take up much less space.
1 kg = 1000 grams 1 gram = 0.001 kg
A kilogram is greater than a gram.
You take the gram weigh 100 less and that is your kilogram . Because , kilograms weigh more than grams so they are 100 less , but at the same time still larger .
No. 1 kilogram = 1000 grams so grams are smaller
An object will float in water if it has less density than the water. You can calculate the density of the object by dividing its mass by its volume. For comparison, the density of water is: * 1 gram / cubic centimeter * 1 kilogram / liter * 1000 kilograms / cubic meter
Yes. It has no iron core.