The density of pure salt is 2,165 g/cm3.
No salt has a greater density.
The density of a pure salt crystal is 2,165 g/cm3. This is a true density. The density of fine powdered salt (apparent density) is variable: approx. 1 g/cm3.
I do not know but you can divide mass by volume and get the density. --------------------------------------------- The density of a pure salt crystal is 2,165 g/cm3. This is a true density. The density of fine powdered salt (apparent density) is variable: approx. 1 g/cm3.
This density depends on: - temperature - concentration of the salt
Salt water has a higher density than the egg.
Salt water density really depends on a few different things. The concentration of salt and temperature are the 2 largest factors in determining the density of salt water.
the salt makes seawater denser than freshwater. more salt increases the density
Density = Mass/Volume As salt(mass) increases and the volume remains the same, density also increases.
No, it depends on the volume of water that can dissolve the salt. If the volume of water is more then it dissolves more salt and the density will be more and if the volume of the water is less then it dissolves less salt and the density will be less.
That's the bulk density. Crystal density is 2.16 ish g/ml.Measuring density of such a small item can be difficult. The density of table salt is 2.17 grams per cubic centimeter.
The density of a salt water solution compared against the densities of "pure" water and salt provides an approximate value of the ratio of water to salt in the mixture.
The density of NaCl is 2,165 g/cm3; this is not a high density.