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No, it isn't.
If density = mass/volume, and your volume increases while mass remains the same... Then the denominator increases which would decrease the density
It would stay the same
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have a lower average density
A gas will always have the same mass, as it fills a container it's density lowers. Liquids are non- compressible, meaning their density are always the same, for example water's density is 1.0
false
The one with the higher mass has greater density since density = mass / volume.......
Normally when you heat a substance its volume increases while mass stays the same. It may not be noticable but the density would decrease.
The object would behave as a part of fluid and it will remain where it is kept.
No, for one thing, liquids generally have a lesser density than solids. For another, no two materials/compounds can have the exact same density under the exact same conditions (i.e. temperature, pressure, etc...).
Nothing at all. The density of one penny is the same as the density of a truckload of pennies, or of a cargo-ship-load of the metal that's used to make pennies out of.