The density of an ice is 0.92 g/mL
1 m³ = 1.0 x 106 mL
Then:
0.92 g/mL * 1.0 x 106 mL / m³ = 9.2 x 105 g / m³
So multiply that value by 1 m³ to obtain 9.2 x 105 g, which is the same as 9.2 x 10² kg = 920 kg.
The dimension of the side in cm are required to calculate the volume (cm3) and density in g/cm3 or specific gravity of the substance is then used to calculate the mass.
Mass = Volume x Density
The best way to determine the volume of an ice cube is to calculate its mass. The formula to calculate the mass of an ice cube is cm3 x 0.9 gm/cm3.
umm
the mass does not change because in science class today we learned when you measure an ice cube (mass) it is the same mass of ice melted!
No it is not
Yes, Ice Cube is Rollin' 60's Crip.
An ice cube is frozen water, which is a solid.
It absorbs more light
the total amount of water in a ice cube
the mass of an ice cube is best measured in grams using a balance.
in the total of mass of all the ice cube 50
Crushed ice
a ice cube in alcohol would melt fastest because of the heating molecules contracting with the ice cube molecules
It depends if the ice cube your talking about have the bigger density than the water which is 1.00G/ML then it will sink .... TO get the density of the cube u have u have to divide the mass over the volume of the cube..
That would depend on the temperature of the cube and the water along with the volume of water and the mass of the ice cube and its area.
yes
Cube is not the description most scientists use: the term is ice sheet. Antarctica's land mass is 98% covered -- by an ice sheet.
No, when an ice cube melts, the atoms move closer together so it seems like a smaller amount. However, it does not lose mass, the number of atoms are still the same.
The depends on the mass of ice, stirring and other factors.
Yes, no matter what the state will be, but the final voume's mass is always the same.