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- the volume increase- the density decrease- a chemical reaction may occur- a change of phase is possible
It will increase. Density is mass/volume. Mass remains constant since no matter is entering or escaping. Lowering the temperature decreases the volume. Same mass in a smaller space= increased density.
Density decreases
If density = mass/volume, and your volume increases while mass remains the same... Then the denominator increases which would decrease the density
The density of the glass has not changed, but since air is less dense than glass, the density of the block has decreased.
It increase by The cube of Two, namely increases by
Generally, if air is heated, its temperature will increase. And if the pressure remains constant, its density will decrease.
Usually, an increase in temperature will result in a decrease in density, and vice versa. (There are exceptions, but they are very rare.)The amount by which this happens is the coefficient of thermal expansion. If it doesn't happen (like for borosilicate glass, used for test tubes) the coefficient is zero. If it works backwards (higher density with higher temperature, like water between 32-40 degrees F), the coefficient is negative.
- the volume increase- the density decrease- a chemical reaction may occur- a change of phase is possible
It will increase. Density is mass/volume. Mass remains constant since no matter is entering or escaping. Lowering the temperature decreases the volume. Same mass in a smaller space= increased density.
the density lowers
Nothing would happen to its density.
this just goes back to freshman human geography, look up the four stages of the demographic transition.
The reason they change direction near shore is because the density of objects increase!
it will be have a lot of density
Density decreases
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