Density = Mass / Volume
Therefore:
Increase in Mass --> Increase in Density
Increase in Volume --> Decrease in Density
and Vice Versa.. :)
Hope this helped
In almost all cases, the matter expands. Density = mass / volume. When volume increases, the density decreases, because the mass is fixed.
The answer depends on what happens to other characteristics: particularly density or volume
stays the same
Density gets decreased as D = M / V Density and Volume are inversely related.
Mass = Density x Volume Density = Mass ÷ Volume Volume = Mass ÷ Density
Density is not affected by gravity. Density is affected by mass and volume, such that density = mass/volume. Weight, but not mass, is affected by gravity. Weight and mass are not the same thing.
(mass) Density is mass/volume, so increasing the volume with mass held constant will decrease the density.
Holding volume constant while increasing mass will increase density. density = mass / volume
Density = mass / volume. Therefore, if volume increases and mass doesn't change, density will obviously decrease.
Density is affected by mass and volume. Formula: D=m/v where D=density, m=mass, v=volume
it liquifies.
Mass = Density x Volume Density = Mass/Volume Volume = Mass/Density
must decrease
Volume of anything = (its mass) divided by (its density) regardless of what shape it happens to be.
the density increases
It can; density is the mass of an object divided by its volume. Increasing its mass could increase its density--it depends on what happens to the volume as well.
When mass increases and volume stays constant, the density increases. When volume increases and mass stays constant the density decreases. When they both change, then the density will depend on the rate of change of mass and the rate of change of volume.