Heat or cool the object and this will cause a density change.
Either a decrease or increase in temperature will change the density of an object.
You can find a rock's density in many different ways. That object has a high density and will not float on water.
-- Make the object bigger, by inflating it, or by beating it thin and forming it into a hollow box or ball. -- Place it in a fluid that has greater density than the fluid it's in now.
Man applies the concept of density in many ways. One way is by designing ships and submarines that will float on water. If the density of the object is less than the water's density, the object will float, but if its density is less than the density of water, it will sink.
Walking skateboarding and riding your bile
To change density there are three ways. You can change the shape, mass or volume of the object
Either a decrease or increase in temperature will change the density of an object.
you can either change the volume or the mass
You can find a rock's density in many different ways. That object has a high density and will not float on water.
-- Make the object bigger, by inflating it, or by beating it thin and forming it into a hollow box or ball. -- Place it in a fluid that has greater density than the fluid it's in now.
Man applies the concept of density in many ways. One way is by designing ships and submarines that will float on water. If the density of the object is less than the water's density, the object will float, but if its density is less than the density of water, it will sink.
WAY 1: multiplying are and the depth of an object WAY 2: dividing weight by the density of an object
Pressure Temperature Changes in the molecular structure(chemical change)
No, they are a measure of length/distance. ___________ Indirectly, they are related. Density is the amount of mass in an object per unit of volume of the object, and linear measures would be integral to the measurement of volume, whether the object is a regular geometric shape, or if the volume has to be calculated in more complex ways.
Derive from measurements of length, breadth, height, radius, diameter etc. Measure the volume of displaced liquid when the object is submerged. If the object is of a material of known density (or specific gravity), weigh it and calculate volume from volume = mass/density.
The same as when it is in air, unless the object interacts with either water or air, or both (in different ways). Density is dependant on the object's mass and volume and has nothing to do with the medium in which it is sitting, unless that medium interacts with it in some way.
Walking skateboarding and riding your bile