small wall nails, tacks and small cut nails! there all done . thxs
Cual es el perímetro
1.9 cm cannot describe a mass. A mass must be 3-dimesional object, 1.9 cm givs the measure of only 1-dimension.
A meter stick of course!
The same object that is 11.5 cm long
0.2911 cm
1 metre
5.86 g/cm^3 615 g / 105 cm^3 = 5.86 g/cm^3
It is: 2*3*10 = 60 cubic cm
the density of an object that is 10 cm by 2 cm and has a mass 400g will be 10000 Kg m-3. This can be calculated by the formula, density = mass/volume
we know, volume of object cuboid = l * b* h volume = 20 * 5*2= 200 cm ^3
6 square centimeters, or 6 cm2
Density is calculated as Mass / Volume. Therefore for an object that has a mass of 350 grams and a volume of 95 cm^3, the density would be 3.684 g/cm^3. Water has an estimated 1g/cm^3 density, therefore the density of this object is greater than that of water and would sink.
Density is calculated as Mass / Volume. Therefore for an object that has a mass of 350 grams and a volume of 95 cm^3, the density would be 3.684 g/cm^3. Water has an estimated 1g/cm^3 density, therefore the density of this object is greater than that of water and would sink.
1 cm is approximately the width of a fingernail or the thickness of a 3/8 inch bolt.
45 cm.
The density of an object with a mass of 16 g and volume of 8 cm^3 would be 2 g/cm^3.
if this is the same question i had then the answer is -the blue object has a density less than 1g/cm^3
5 centimeters to the right from the point of origin