density
density is mass divided by volume
Mass does not mean density. Density is mass per unit of volume. If, the volume of an object is the unit volume then the measure of its mass and density will be the same.
Momentum.
Mass (or weight) per unit volume.
Density. D= M/V D= DENSITY M= MASS V= VOLUME
density is mass divided by volume
Its density which is found by dividing the mass by the volume.
density
Volume mass area Latest correction: Of these, only volume is correct. Area is not space, and mass has nothing to do with occupied space. Two objects of different volume can have identical masses, and two objects of different mass can have the same volume. The only true statement that can be made between the two is that all objects with a measurable bounded volume have mass. That is why the only possible answer is Volume
Mass does not mean density. Density is mass per unit of volume. If, the volume of an object is the unit volume then the measure of its mass and density will be the same.
That depends what you include under the term "objects". In general, those would be subatomic particles. Many of them are (in a sense) considered to have no volume. Some of them, such as photons and gravitons, have zero mass (rest mass; they will have some mass due to their energy).
Density is the term for mass per unit volume. It can be measured in kg/m3 , g/m3 etc.
If you divide mass by volume, you get Density.
volume
Momentum.
Volume.
The term for science is volume, mass, and units.I HOPE you get the answer right.