0.5
You calculate density as mass / volume.
To calculate the density of an object, divide the mass (54) by the volume (300). The answer is about 5.
density = mass/volume volume = mass/density mass = density x volume Ex: V=40m cubed M=300g D=a M/V 300/40 = 7.5g _______ m cubed or D= 7.5 grams per meter cubed
Divide mass by density to get volume....So 300/0.88 --> 340.91 mL
density = mass/volume = 1800g/300 cm³ = 6 g/cm³
density = mass / volume => 300g / 25.2ml ~= 11.9 g/ml
You cannot associate weight with volume without knowing the density. If you find this out. Density is mass/volume
Density is mass per unit volume, so 200 g divided by 300 cm3 is 0.6667 g cm-3
the yellow ball. density is mass / volume. 100/300= .33333 50/15=3.33333 3.33333>.33333
-100
That depends on the liquid. To get the MASS, multiply the volume by the density. To get the WEIGHT, multiply the mass by the gravity.
No, litres is a unit of volume and kilograms is a unit of mass. These are not comparable unless you know the density of the material you are measuring. Water has an approximate density of 1 kg/L, so 300 L of water is approximately 300 kg.