Want this question answered?
Answer #1:Yes, assuming the mass stays the same.==================================Answer #2:A large amount of a substance has the same density as a small amount of the same substance.A gold nugget has the same density as a gold bar.A tank-car-ful of fresh water has the same density as a glass of fresh water.
Mass is the amount of matter in an object and is measured in grams.
The gold. The mass per unit volume of the gold will be much higher.
To answer this question, you need to know the density of gold, which is 19.30g/cm3. The formula for density is: Density = mass/volume The given volume of gold is 1cm3. *1cc = 1cm3. Manipulate the density formula to find mass: mass = density x volume = 19.30g/cm3 x 1cm3 = 19.30g of gold
because it has a higher mass per volume or g/cm cubed
The Holterman Nugget was found in Hill End in NSW on 19 October, 1872. It was the largest single nugget ever discovered anywhere, although strictly speaking, it was not really a single nugget but rather a mass of gold found in a reef.
lump, mass, gold, rock
YUPP... if you have a chicken nugget and a gold nugget, they can both have the same mass but the gold nugget is going to weigh one heck of a lot more. (my dad told me this so you betcha its right.)
With the information given, the density of your nugget is about 19.29 g/cc. The density of gold is given as about 19.3 g/cc, so your nugget fits the density requirements for it to be a gold nugget.
The specific gravity of gold is 19.3 The mass will be 3.28*19.3 = 63.304 grammes.
A small nugget is one that you can only pick up with two fingers , approx .2gm. The holtermans is not a nugget but a mass of gold.
The nugget of gold has a volume of 2.6 cm3, and the nugget of pyrite has a volume of 10 cm3.
yes
The answer depends on what characteristic of the gold nugget you wish to measure: its mass, weight, volume, density, temperature, electrical conductivity, etc.
Mr Bernhardt/Bernard Otto Holtermann - He discovered it at Hill End, Australia in 1872, the Holtermann Nugget remains the largest single mass of gold ever discovered in the world, measuring 1.5 metres long and weighing almost 290 kg.
Assuming the gold nugget is solid and pure (unlikely in real life!) The volume of the nugget is 77.0 - 50.0 mL = 27.0 mL So density = mass/volume = 521/27.0 = 19.3 g per mL.
it is the ocean