Specific gravity refers to the ratio of the density of a substance to the density of a standard, which is usually water. A piece of metal that has a mass of 200 g and a volume of 2 cm3 has a specific gravity of 100.
The object has a density of 0.7 g/cm3
An object with a mass of 24 g and a volume of 8 cc has a density of 3 g/cc
it matters what the substance is. If 878g of gold vs. 1487 g of silver, the density of gold is still more
0.6 g
200 g is a mass, not a weight 0.2 kg = 200 g
200 g is a mass, not a weight 0.2 kg = 200 g
yes
0.3456 g
The mass divided by the volume, v.
500 g is a mass greater than 200 g.
Specific gravity refers to the ratio of the density of a substance to the density of a standard, which is usually water. A piece of metal that has a mass of 200 g and a volume of 2 cm3 has a specific gravity of 100.
The density of the object is 11.3 g/cm3
The volume should be 200 cm3, not cm2. Density = Mass/Volume = 120g /200 cm3 = 0.6 g/cm3
The object has a density of 0.7 g/cm3
It's mass would be the same
It's mass would be the same