Metric units are based off of the properties of water. So the density of water is 1 g/mL
OR
1 g/cm3
This depends on the amount of water and the amount of salt.
Density
The same as the density of any other amount of water.
The density of something does not depend on the amount of the substance you have, the density of 1 gram of water is the same as the density of 100000000 grams of water. The density of pure water at standard temperature and pressure is 1.
1g/mL Density is an intensive property so no matter the amount of water, its density is always the same.
No, the amount of water displaced by an object is determined by its volume, not its density. Objects with different densities but the same volume will displace the same amount of water.
the amount of density
The amount of salt.
yes, density stays the same regardless of amount
The lower an objects density the less likely it is to sink in water. Objects with a higher density than water will sink if placed in it while objects with a lower density than water will float if placed in it.
this will cause the density to be lower than it actually is because it does not displace the full amount of water it should
No, pouring out some water from a bucket does not change the density of the water remaining in the bucket. Density is a physical property of a substance that remains constant regardless of the amount of that substance present.