6 mL = 6 cc (cubic centimetres).
Density = Mass/Volume = 57/6 = 9.5 g/cc
density = mass/volume density = 15/20 = 3/4 units/ml
Density = Mass/Volume = 13.6 g/cm3
Density = Mass/Volume so Volume = Mass/Density. That is, Vol = 1.5 g/2.3 g/ml = 0.652 ml approx.
Density = Mass/Volume = 17/4 = 4.25 grams per cm3
Volume = mass/volume = 500g/10cm3 = 50g/cm3
Density is the mass of the object divided by its volume. By this principle, to determine the density of a metal, place the metal onto a scale to measure its mass. After this, place the metal into a beaker of water and measure the volume change in the beaker. Divide the mass by the volume and you get the density.
Density is found by dividing Mass by volume where mass is in grams and volume is in milliliters. 20 liters=20,000 ml so the calculation becomes 158/20,000 which yiels a result of .0079
A sample of an unknown metal has a mass of 35.4g and a volume of 3.11cm^3. The metal is Lead.
You divide the mass and the volume
density = mass / volume =190 / 20 =9.5g/cm3
The basic formula for density is density = mass/volume. If you have mass and density, you can manipulate the formula so that volume = density x mass.
the density of the unknown metal is 8900g/mL d=m/v d=178000g/20.0mL=8900g/mL OR scientific notation and sig figs = 8.90x103g/mL
density = mass/volume density = 15/20 = 3/4 units/ml
D=M/V Therefore : 3.54g/3.11cm = 11.4g/cm^3
Mass = Density x Volume Density = Mass/Volume Volume = Mass/Density
Density = Mass/Volume = 13.6 g/cm3
Density = Mass/Volume so Volume = Mass/Density. That is, Vol = 1.5 g/2.3 g/ml = 0.652 ml approx.