The SI or International System of Units for density is kilograms per cubic meter. It is also common for density to be measured in metric tons per cubic meter or kilograms per liter.
The unit of density is kilograms per cubic meter (kg/m^3) or grams per cubic centimeter (g/cm^3). The unit of relative density, also known as specific gravity, is dimensionless as it is the ratio of the density of a substance to the density of a reference substance (typically water).
Density unit is mass / volume. SI unit for dendity is kg/m3.
"kilometer" is a unit of length or distance, not a unit of density.
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The SI unit for density is kg/m3In the CGS system, it is g/cci have no idea:P
Unit of density is 1kg/1000 cm3 because Density = Mass/Volume
'Density' is not a unit at all. Density is how tightly atoms in an object are packed together. Therefore, density isn't a new unit, or a unit at all for that matter. The SI units of density are kg m-3. It common use the cgs unit g cm-3 is much more prevalent.
Density is mass/volume. So the unit of density is any unit of mass divided by any unit of volume. e.g. g/cm3.
The unit for density can be anything as long as it is a unit of mass over a unit of volume. Usually it is expressed as grams/liter.
The quantity of matter per unit volume is the density.
a fundamental unit is kg or m - (also seconds, amps, candela and moles). Density is kg/m3 and is thus derived.
Density is the ratio of an object's mass to its volume.