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..
Density is basically how "dense" an object is. If you have a sugar cube, you can see that there are particles in it that are farther apart with a smaller density than a cube of steel, that the particles are packed closer together.
1.5
density of 1.5 cm tall and mass of 1.0 g of a cube of a cork=mass/volume of cube== 1.0/(1.5*1.5*1.5)gm/cm3=.2963gm/cm3
To measure the mass of a metal cube. First find it's volume, V = L (length) x W (width) x H (height), since it's a cube the L, W, and H are all the same so, V= L^3= H^3= V^3. Then you look up the density in a table or on the internet and multiple the density by volume to get mass. V = L (length) x W (width) x H (height) m = V * density (row)
If the mass of the cube is 96 g, what is the density of the cube material?
No. Each piece of the cube would have the same density.
The density is (32)/(the length of each edge of the cube)3
Multiply the volume of the cube by its density.
B/c the density of the ice cube is greater than the density of the air.
Its density is 2g/cms3
Density = mass/volume Density of the cube = 8g/2cm3 = 4g/cm3
That completely depends on the volume of the cube.
Cannot be answered without knowing the size of the cube!If the cube were 1 cm on a side the density would be 60.If the cube were 10 cm on a side the density would be 0.06...We cannot determine the answer because we are not given the volume.Density= mass/volumeVolume of a cube=L3 ; where L = side length
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..
The answer depends on what you were trying to predict.
The density is(mass of the cube)/(15.625)