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Density of substance = mass of substance / volume mass of substance = density x volume
Density is a measure of the amount (as a mass) of something for a given volume (liters).So, for example, there may be 1 billion atoms in 1 liter of air. If this volume of air expands, then the individual atoms will become further apart, and you will therefore have fewer atoms in the 1 liter of air, and there fore it will be less dense.
air has volume air has mass
As the air bubble increases in volume, its mass remains constant. Because the mass remains constant but volume increases, density will decrease.
Compressed air is MORE dense than expanded air. Density is the measure of an objects mass (measured in grams, kilograms, pounds etc) divided by its volume (cubic centimetres, litres, cubic feet, cubic yards etc). D= m/V Decreasing the volume of an object, or in this case a fixed amount of air, increases the density because the mass does not change but the volume gets smaller. Increasing the volume (expanded air) causes the density to decrease.
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Density of substance = mass of substance / volume mass of substance = density x volume
greater the air preaser:)
For a given volume and pressure, the mass of the air contained in that volume (density) will decrease as the temperature increases.
The air is less dense.
greater the air preaser:)
did you mean "mass air flow" sensor (MAF)? it measures the amount of air flowing into intake.
The temperature and pressure rise.
Mass is the amount of matter in an object, and volume is the amount of space something takes up (example, air takes up space)
Raise it to the power of minus one. Specific volume is volume per unit mass, density is mass per unit volume. They are multiplicative inverses of one another.
The smoke from a given volume of air is collected on a preweighed paper filter; density is mass/volume.
Absolute humidity