The density of gasoline is 800 kg.
0.7954 at 15 C
Gasoline has a density of around .71g/mL while water's density is 1g/mL so Gasoline floats on Water.
Gasoline is not a pure substance, and is actually changed in its formulation for different seasons. Samples of gasoline may have a density around the range of 0.70 to 0.80 kg/L.
Aluminum will sink in gasoline because its density (2.7g per cc) is greater than that of gasoline (about 0.7g per cc).
The density of gasoline is 800 kg.
0.7954 at 15 C
The density of petroleum diesel is about 0.85 kg/l whereas petrol (gasoline) has a density of about 0.72 kg/l, about 15% less
density of Fuel Oil at 15 degree celcius
1.22 kg/m3
Gasoline has a density of around .71g/mL while water's density is 1g/mL so Gasoline floats on Water.
For every five-degree (Celsius) change in temperature, figure about a 0.5-percent change in density. Avgas (aviation gasoline) weighs about 6.02 pounds per US Gallon at 15 degrees C. That increases to 6.40 pounds per US gallon at -40 degrees C. Mogas (automotive gas) is, for the most part, the same. The density of gasoline (C8H18) is 0.694 g / cm^3 at 300 K and 0.622 g / cm^3 at 400 K. Density shouldn't change that much relative to the ground temperature (300 K =80 F). http://www.omega.com/techref/flowmetertutorial.html Reference: Engineering Thermodynamics, Volume 1, Spring 2002, Roger A. Gater, Mechanical Engineering, University of Florida
Gasoline is not a pure substance, and is actually changed in its formulation for different seasons. Samples of gasoline may have a density around the range of 0.70 to 0.80 kg/L.
Assuming constant pressure, the answer is:density = 0.789 x 20/15 = 1.052 kg/litre
Actually, it is impossible to freeze gasoline, but at around -180 degrees F it turns "gummy".
Kerosene has a specific gravity of 0.820 at 60 degrees Fahrenheit.
i think gasoline