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Density is defined as the amount of matter (mass) per unit of volume of a specific substance, and is calculated by dividing the mass of any sample of the substance in question by its volume. Considering the unit of density as g/cm3 (grams per cubic centimeter or grams per cc), the density of the substance in your question is exactly 1.5 g/cm3.
Jade is not a single chemical substance. Their densities range from 2.9 grams per cubic centimetre to 3.4 g/cc.
It depends upon the substance and the temperature. For water at room temperature the volume would be 0.0125L
If something with a volume of 6 cc (1 cc = 1 cm3) weighs 63 grams we can do some simple math to determine density, which is weight per unit of volume of a substance or material. 63 g / 6cc = 10.5 g / 1 cc = 10.5 g/cc The density of silver is 10.5 grams per cm3. Wikipedia has more information on silver, and a link to that post can be found below.
Density = Mass/Volume =3.21/45 =7.13g/cc Spec Grav = density of substance/ density of water =7.13/1 =7.13
Density is defined as the amount of matter (mass) per unit of volume of a specific substance, and is calculated by dividing the mass of any sample of the substance in question by its volume. Considering the unit of density as g/cm3 (grams per cubic centimeter or grams per cc), the density of the substance in your question is exactly 1.5 g/cm3.
The answer depends on the substance being measured. Water, for instance, has a density of 1 gram per cubic centimeter. Therefore, multiplying seventy cc of water times the density of one gram / cc would yield 70 grams of water. Simply multiply the substance's density (in grams per cc or grams per mL as 1 mL = 1 cc) by 70 to get your answer.
At 4 degrees Celsius and 1 Atm pressure, the density of pure water is 1 gram per cc.
It depends on the density of the substance.
Jade is not a single chemical substance. Their densities range from 2.9 grams per cubic centimetre to 3.4 g/cc.
That depends on:The density of the substance (if it is pure); orThe concentration of the substance (if it is a solution)
Density = Mass/Volume = 1.5/6.4 grams per cc = 0.234 grams per cc (approx).
It depends upon the substance and the temperature. For water at room temperature the volume would be 0.0125L
This depends on the substance. cc is an abbreviation for cubic centimeter, which is a measure of volume. mg is an abbreviation for milligrams, which is a measure of mass. These can be related by density. So if the density equals (60 mg)/(5 cc) = 12 milligrams per cubic centimeter, then the answer is yes.However, both of these terms are used in measuring medicines and drugs. Usually a liquid suspension or a serum for injection will be stated has having a certain number of milligrams of medicine per cc of liquid. This would not necessarily have anything to do with the density of the substance, since the suspension or serum may have inactive ingredients included.
grams per CC
7.86 grams per cc
specific gravity