No, the density of water is not 1m because density is a measurement of mass per volume eg g/cm3, whereas 1m is a measure of distance (1 metre).
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
the density of water is around 1000 kg/square meter therefore 1 kg of water is around a liter.
The density of water is 1 and it is a liquid.
Water has a density of 1 - therefore anything that sinks in water (e.g. iron with a density of 7.874) has a density higher than 1 and anything that floats in water has density less than 1.
Density=mass/volume density of water in the whole earth is 1
The density of fresh water at 17 degrees Celsius is 998.77 kilograms per cubic meter. The density of fresh water at 19 degrees Celsius is 998.40 kilograms per cubic meter.
It depends on the density of the material you mean. Only if it is pure water, 1 cubic meter weighs 1 ton. If you don't mean pure water, you must know the density of the material, which is defined as its mass per unit volume.
the density= mass/volume, so as you can see the mass of one cubic meter of water determines the density of the water.
depends on the density and metal content.
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, fresh water of 10 degrees Celsius has a density of 999.728 kilograms per cubic meter. Seawater of 10 degrees Celsius and of 3.5 % salinity has a density of 1026.978 kilograms per cubic meter.
the density of water is around 1000 kg/square meter therefore 1 kg of water is around a liter.
You need to take into account the density of the material. So for example a cubic meter of water weighs a ton (1000kg), since the density of water is 1 kg/litre or using the SI unit 1000 kg/m^3.
At 82 degrees Celsius fresh water has a density of 970.2 kilograms per cubic meter.
Water has a density of 1 gram per cubic centimeter. There are 1,000,000 cubic centimeters in a cubic meter, so 1 cubic meter has a mass of 1000 kilograms.
Density is the mass per unit volume. For example, 1 cubic meter of water has a mass of 1000 kg, so its density is 1000 kg m-3.
Bitumen emulsion is also known as asphalt. It has a density of 1 ton per cubic meter at 20 degrees C. Bitumen emulsion has a density that is just slightly higher than water.