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A unit of volume for a 3 dimensional object such as cubic inches, metres, litres etc. A unit of area for a 2 dimensional object such as square inches, metres etc
Measure the volume of the object which is same as the volume of the displaced liquid in which that sinks. And measure the mass of the same object from a weighing machine. then use density = mass/volume
Volume is a measure of space. Every object that takes up space must have volume. Therefore, every object you will ever encounter must have volume.
-- Measure its mass. -- Measure its volume. -- Divide its mass by its volume. The result is its density.
volume
If you want to measure it's volume, place it in a measuring cylinder containing a certain amount of water, and measure the extra units to get the volume of the object
you would use a scale to measure the mass and a beaker to measure the volume. i need another tool
A unit of volume for a 3 dimensional object such as cubic inches, metres, litres etc. A unit of area for a 2 dimensional object such as square inches, metres etc
You fill up water ina beaker, measure the volume of the water as it originally was, then drop in an irregulary-shaped object, measure that volume, and subtrect the two. The difference is the volume of the object.
No volume is how much space an object takes up. Mass is the measure of the amount of matter in an object.
multiply it Length- Width - Height , or measure the volume of a container of water then stick the object in and measure the volume of the object+water then subtract the volume of the water then you have the volume
No, a triple balance beam will measure the mass of an object but not its volume.
Millilitres and/or cubic centimetres are used to measure the volume of a small object. milileters
-- Measure its mass. -- Measure its volume. -- Divide the mass by the volume. The result of the division is the object's density.
If the object is irregular the best way is to measure the volume of water it displaces when you immerse it completely in water.
You cannot. A circle is a 2-dimensional object which has an area but no thickness and, therefore, no volume. A litre is a measure of volume. You cannot measure an object with no volume using units that are intended for volume.
An object's mass divided by its volume gives you a measure of the object's density.