the Atomic Mass is 26.981539
if that's what you're looking for.
NO. Not at all. The question wasn't atomic weight, but SPECIFIC WEIGHT.
SPECIFIC WEIGHT is the ratio of DENSITY of the material to the Density of Water at an established set of conditions.
Thus, the Specific weight of Aluminum is approximately 2.7 times the weight of water.
So that if you have a cubic foot of aluminum, it will weight more or less two point seven times the weight of a cubic foot of water, that is around 168.5 pounds, but bear in mind that different commercial aluminum alloys can vary from 2.5 to 2.9 in their specific weight, but 2.7 is a good value for practical purposes.
1000 kg aluminium oxide contain 470,588 kg aluminium.
1.3 kg/met./sec
A litre is a volumetric measurement and kg (kilogram) is a measurement of weight. Specific gravity is a measure of density. It compares density of elements or material (stuff) to the weight of one kilogram of water. If the material (stuff) in question is less dense (lighter) than water, additional volume of the stuff is needed to equal one kilogram of water. The opposite (meaning less stuff) is needed for heavey stuff. In this case the specific gravity of 79 means the material is 79 times more dense than water so only one 79th of a litre is needed to equal a kilogram of water so (X litres/815 kg = 79; X - 10.3 litres)
mica has the specific gravity of 2.88
Local gravity can't be described in units of "kg".The acceleration of gravity at the surface of Mercury is3.697 meters (12.13 feet) per second2 .
specific gravity is density relative to water. (water = 1 kg / litre) specific gravity of petrol is 0.72 ( 0.72 kg / litre) 33 000 litres petrol * 0.72 = 23 760 kg
1000 kg aluminium oxide contain 470,588 kg aluminium.
8,550 x 1.280 = 10,944 kg.
Mass = sg * volume = 0.82 * 50 kg = 41 kg
Density is defined as the mass per unit volume. Hence its unit is SI system is kg/m3 But specific gravity other wise known as relative density is defined as the ratio of the density of the substance to that of water. So no unit for specific gravity. Density of water is 1000 kg/ m3 Density of mercury is 13,600 kg /m3 Hence specific gravity or relative density of mercury is 13.6
(specific gravity = density relative to water), water is 1 g / cubic centimetre, aluminium is 2.7 g / cubic centimetre, so s.g. is 2.7/1 = 2.7
The specific gravity of standard air is approximately 1.29 kg/m³ at sea level and at 20°C. Specific gravity is a dimensionless quantity, often expressed relative to the density of water, which has a density of about 1000 kg/m³. Therefore, the specific gravity of air can be calculated as approximately 0.00129 when compared to water. This indicates that air is much less dense than water.
0.8
The specific gravity of ice would also be 0.917, as it is the same as the specific gravity of water because both ice and water are forms of the same substance, H2O.
Aluminium is a very light metal with a specific weight of 2.7 kg dm−3, about a third that of steel.
About 0.8 density is 899.1 kg/m^3 at 0 C
density = mass/volume. The unit of density is kg/m3