8.902 g/cm3 at 20 degrees Celsius.
Copper-nickel is an alloy of copper and nickel which have different densities. You need to know the proportions of each metal in the alloy to determine its density.
Strictly be density, nickel should float on mercury.
The density of holmium at room temperature is 8.79g/cm3 - approximately 98% of the density of nickel.
How HEAVY it is depends on how large a piece of nickel you have, so the appropriate question is how DENSE it is. The density of nickel is about 8.9 kilogram per liter - i.e., 8.9 times the density of water.
The nickel's density is about 8.91 g/cm3
Nickel as a metal has a density of 8.908 grams per cubic cm.
It is unchanged. The density is the mass divided by the volume, and as both of these numbers are halved the density does not change.
Yes. Nickel has a density of 8.912 gm/cm^3, while by definition the density of water (at 4C) is 1.0 gm/cm^3.
8.908 g·cm-3
When you consider the theoretical density of a material, you consider a material where every atomic position is filled with an atom of that material in a perfect lattice arrangement with no errors. For example, if you consider Nickel, each of the atomic positions are filled with a Nickel atom. So if this were to occur over 1g/cm^3, you have a theoretically dense Nickel. However, in this universe this is virtually impossible, as we know it anyway! :) Real world materials, no matter how brilliant your processing parameters always contain some impurities (other atoms besides Nickel), flaws, missing atoms (called a vacancy), porosity, etc... All of these things bring the density of the Nickel away form the theoretical density and you end up with the "real world" density of the material. This is a basic explanation, but I hope it gives some information and helps in kicking off some research on the net. Materials Scientist, PhD.
The core, as it is mainly made up of iron and nickel.
Less than. The moon rock density is greater in ferromagnesion and nickel content, with greater density, whereas silicate rocks contain largely quartz and feldspar minerals.