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889g from lucy masseto
The density would be 25/500 =0.05 g/mL This is a totally unlikely result since the rock has roughly one twentieth the density of water!
Find the mass of an empty container using a balance. Fill the container with 100 ml of water and measure the mass again, The difference between the two measurements is the mass of 100 ml of water.
78.7 grams
1 gram = 1 mL so;500 g = 500 mL34
Strangely enough, it is 500 millilitres!
That depends on the size of the water bottle. One popular size in stores is the convenient half-litre (16.9 fl oz), which is 500 ml.
That depends what substance is in the 500 ml volume, and how much mass is in each ml of that substance. If the 500 ml are full of stones or lead, they contain many many mg of mass. If the 500 ml are full of water, they contain roughly 5,000 mg of mass. If the 500 ml are full of air, they contain far fewer mg of mass. If the 500 ml are empty, they contain no mg of mass at all.
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If the bottle holds 500 mL of water, then its contents have a nominal mass of 500 grams, and weigh 4.9 newtons (1.1 pounds) on Earth. -- If it holds some other substance, then its mass and weight are different. -- If it is weighed in some other place, then the weight of the same mass is different. -- This discussion applies only to the bottle's contents. We have no way to estimate the mass or weight of the container.
Question as asked cannot be answered. We know that the bottle can contain 500 mL of ketchup, but we don't know the volume of the material from which the bottle is made, nor the correct density (the figure given as density, 1.43 g, is actually a mass). In addition even if we assume that the figure given for density is 1.43 g/mL is an actual density, from the sentence structure we have a volume for ketchup, and a density of the material in the bottle ("density" refers back to bottle, not to ketchup—"Bottle contains ... and has a density of"). If the one who posed the question meant to write, "If a bottle contains 500 ml of ketchup, and the ketchup has a density of 1.43 g/l, what is the mass of the ketchup in the bottle in grams", then the original answer to the question 715g/mL mass = density x volume is correct.
889g from lucy masseto
if you are talking about water then 500 grams of water is 500 ml of water. I hope this is what you mean.
well one bottle is 500 ml so one glass is probably like 250 ml
mass of empty RD bottle is 5.8 gram.(volume=25 ml)
mass of empty RD bottle is 5.8 gram.(volume=25 ml)