Two cubes are exactly the same size. The cube that is made of the material with the largest density will have the largest mass.
Density refers to the amount of mass per unit volume. Material with high density have a lot of mass in a little space. Objects with a high density sink while objects with a low density tend to float. As an example, Ice cubes are less dense than water because the freezing process traps air, forcing expansion -- that's why they float in water. lolz its too GOGOT
ice is less dense than water
cubes, very small cubes
Ice cubes will float in liquid water, and any other liquid more dense than 1 gram/cm3 (including acetic acid, beer, bromine, carbon disulfide, carbon tetrachloride, chloroform, citric acid, ethylene glycol, glucose, glycerin, iodine, milk, phenol, propylene carbonate, sea water, and many others.
Ice cubes are not naturally-occurring in the cube form, they are man-made. But ice itself is a mineral.
Two cubes are exactly the same size. The cube that is made of the material with the largest density will have the largest mass.
The question cannot be answered without information about the masses of the cubes.
The density is(mass of the cube)/(15.625)
2 cubes = 4 prisms
Ice cubes don't sink in water, as the density of an ice cube is less than the density of water.
They are all cubes. They are all made of molecules. They are all the same size. They don't have the same density. They all have atoms. I could go on for a while!
Ice Cubes do float! This is because the density of ice is less than the density of liquid water.
The answer depends on how many 1 cm cubes you start off with. If you had n cubes then the largest hollow cube is a k-cube where k^3 <= 6n^2 - 12n + 8
The simplest is that one of the cubes is hollow - except that in that case it would not be a proper cube. The next simplest answer is the amount of air dissolved in the water before it was frozen. A more complex answer is the proportions of heavier isotopes of oxygen and hydrogen in the water molecules.
Density isn't a property of the size of the material. rather, it's a property of the matter itself. In other words, it doesn't matter if you have 1 billion microscopic cubes of iron or a 40,000 ton cube of iron... It's all iron, so it all has the same density.
Density refers to the amount of mass per unit volume. Material with high density have a lot of mass in a little space. Objects with a high density sink while objects with a low density tend to float. As an example, Ice cubes are less dense than water because the freezing process traps air, forcing expansion -- that's why they float in water. lolz its too GOGOT
The only material in an ice cube is water.