0.2836 lbs./Cu. In. OR 460 lbs. / cu. ft.
Density is not a descriptive word but a property of materials. Therefore, a material can have a high or low density. Density has units of unit mass per unit volume. "Specific volume" has units of unit volume per unit mass, so it is sort of an opposite. No real antonyms for "density" in the English langauge... some sense of "insubstantial" might work.
Unit of density is 1kg/1000 cm3 because Density = Mass/Volume
Density unit is mass / volume. SI unit for dendity is kg/m3.
Density is what per unit volume
The density of a substance stays the same, no matter how much space it takes up.
weight of all steel can be calculated by multiplying unit volume with density.
Steel has the greatest density of the three.
The Answer to this question is: The density is not measure Kilonewtons. That is because "Density" is defined as the mass per unit volume. The Density of steel = 7850 kgf/m^3
In SI system, unit of density is kg/m3 But no unit for relative density as it is the ratio of density of the material to that of water
The density of steel as per IS 2062 will vary. This is because steel's density typically changes with composition.
The density of aluminized steel is 2710. Additionally, the density of its counterpart, carbon steel, is slightly different at 2833.
Density is not a descriptive word but a property of materials. Therefore, a material can have a high or low density. Density has units of unit mass per unit volume. "Specific volume" has units of unit volume per unit mass, so it is sort of an opposite. No real antonyms for "density" in the English langauge... some sense of "insubstantial" might work.
density of galvanized steel 7850kg/m3
density of galvanized steel 7850kg/m3
the density of TMT R/F steel is 7850
No set answer to that, as steel pipes come in various diameters and wall thicknesses. If you want to be real accurate, they also come in various steel alloys, which do have some difference in density between them.
All types of steel have a density of 7,85e03 kg/m3