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2.5 g/cm3
0.0125
0.83g/ml. You take the mass and divide it by the volume to get the density of the object. so 2.5/3.0=0.8333333g/ml.
V= M/D = 1800 g / 1.8 g/cm3 = 100 cm 3 V= M/D = 1800 g / 1.8 g/cm3 = 100 cm 3
You divide the mass by density
Density = 2.991 g/cm3
Since density = mass/volume, D = 25/10 = 2.5g/cm^3
2x3x2=12cm3
density = mass/volume = 36 g / 12 cm3 = 3 grams per cm3
density = mass / volume = 72 g / 36 cm³ = 2 g/cm³
3 grams per cubic centimeter :D
A rectangular prism whose dimensions are 2.0 cm and 3.0 cm and 2.0 cm has a volume of 12cm3
There can be no possible answer to this question. Volume cannot be measured in g. Mass cannot be measured in cm - nor can volume.
A rectangular prism whose dimensions are 2.0 cm x 3.0 cm x 2.0cm has a volume of 12cm3
2.5 g/cm3
An object has a mass, say M It also has a volume, say V A useful relation between the above two is the ratio M/V which is defined as the density of the object. It is the mass of an object whose volume is unity. In solids and liquids, the density remains constant over temperature ranges and pressure ranges. But in gases the density is affected by temperature and pressure.
100 g / 10cm^3 = 10g/cm^3