The volume depends on the temperature and pressure - neither of which are given.
100 grams is a 100 grams no matter what the material, they weigh the same.
Density = Mass/Volume = 100/200 = 0.5 grams per ml.
There are quite a few things you are missing here. firstly, you dont have shape or other dimensions to calculate volume. Secondly to convert volume to grams you need density. If I make two assumptions here, 1. that you mean millilitres, and 2 that the density is 1g/ml (i.e. water). Then 100 grams would be 100 millilitres.
grams are mass, ml's are volume apples and oranges.... however at sea level, standard temp (4 deg C) and pressure 100 ml of water has a mass of 100 g. So in that special condition 100 grams would occupy 100 ml and your answer would be no.
It takes 400 quarter [grams] to make 100 grams.It takes 400 quarter [grams] to make 100 grams.It takes 400 quarter [grams] to make 100 grams.It takes 400 quarter [grams] to make 100 grams.
It's the mass divided by its volume. The volume of a rectangular prism is length times width times height. So it would be 100 grams divided by the volume, and that volume = (L*W*H)
The density of a material does not change with mass. 100 grams of a material will occupy 10 times the volume of 10 grams of the same material.
When the water froze into ice it was expanding (thermal expanision) causing the 100 grams of ice to have a greater volume than 100 grams of water!
Impossible to answer. A volume is not measured in grams it is a cubic amount
100 cm is a length, not a volume. However, if the volume were 100 cubic cm, the density would be 0.196/100 = 0.00196 grams per cc.
When the water froze into ice it was expanding (thermal expanision) causing the 100 grams of ice to have a greater volume than 100 grams of water!
100 grams of water at standard temperature and pressure has a volume of 100 cubic centimeters or 100 millilitres. The volume of 100 grams of any other substance will depend on its specific gravity or density: if less than that of water, it will have a greater volume; if greater than that of water, it will have a smaller volume.
The density is (the mass, in grams)/100 grams per cm3 .
100 grams is a 100 grams no matter what the material, they weigh the same.
Density = Mass/Volume = 10 g/100 mL = 0.1 grams per millilitre.
Density = (mass) / (volume) = 20/4 = 5 grams per cc
1 cup = 226,79 grams / 226,79 grams = 1 cup