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Density = Mass / Volume Therefore: Increase in Mass --> Increase in Density Increase in Volume --> Decrease in Density and Vice Versa.. :) Hope this helped
Volume x density = Mass A material with high density has a great mass for a small volume.
stays the same
In almost all cases, the matter expands. Density = mass / volume. When volume increases, the density decreases, because the mass is fixed.
it decreases.
Mass relates linearly to volume and density. That is to say if you have twice as much volume of the same material (say water) it has twice the mass. If you have something twice as dense at the same volume, it has twice the mass. Note: this applies specifically to mass-density, the most common use of the word. Things like energy-density or population density have a more complicated and often less meaningful relation to mass.
The density goes down.
it becomes a warm front
it becomes a warm front
it becomes a warm front
The density changes in direct proportion with the mass. A lesser mass results in a lesser density and a greater mass results in a greater density.
Density = Mass / Volume Therefore: Increase in Mass --> Increase in Density Increase in Volume --> Decrease in Density and Vice Versa.. :) Hope this helped
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.
Density = mass / volume. Therefore, if volume increases and mass doesn't change, density will obviously decrease.
The density will increase.
Volume of anything = (its mass) divided by (its density) regardless of what shape it happens to be.
Because it has a high mass and volume