I'm having trouble seeing the list from here.
(Any unit of mass) divided by (any unit of volume)
is a unit of density.
Widely used units include:
-- gram/cubic centimeter
-- gram/milliliter
-- kilogram/cubic meter
-- poundmass/cubic foot
The units for density are mass / volume; in the SI, that would ideally be kilograms / cubic meter.
Density is density. Doesn't matter whether it's a solid, liquid, or gas. (any unit of mass) divided by (any unit of volume) is a unit of density. Popular units for density are "gram per cubic centimeter", "kilogram per liter", and "poundmass per cubic foot". My personal favorite is the "slug per hogshead".
Density is the measurement of something per a given volume. The units of density are mass units divided by volume units. An object with a mass of 40g and a volume of 8 cubic cm would have the density of 40 g / 8 cubic cm or 5 g / cubic cm
The mass of a cube is equal to the volume times the density, so side cubed times density. The corresponding SI units would be: meters for length; kilogram per cubic meters for volume; kilograms for mass.
Densities of liquids are simply called densities. However, you might be referring to "viscosity" which is the resistance of a liquid to flow. Corn syrup, for instance, would be considered more viscous than olive oil.
UNITS!!!! We need units to answer this question.
The density is 3,000 units/mL
You would first have to convert everything to units of mass, or of volume. That requires knowing the density of the substances involved.You would first have to convert everything to units of mass, or of volume. That requires knowing the density of the substances involved.You would first have to convert everything to units of mass, or of volume. That requires knowing the density of the substances involved.You would first have to convert everything to units of mass, or of volume. That requires knowing the density of the substances involved.
There are no units of measure suitable for measuring a sport. A tennis court, net, ball, racquet, player can all be measured, but not tennis itself!
Grams are units of mass, millilitres are units of volume. You would need to know the density of the substance.
There is no answer to this question as the 3.8 has no units and there is no mention of what the object would be in.
It would be 341.26 units of mass.
g/cm3
The units for density are mass / volume; in the SI, that would ideally be kilograms / cubic meter.
It depends on the speed and the mass but in general a higher density object would be worse. Everything else being equal, it makes sesnes that being hit by an iron cannonball is more serious than being hit by a tennis ball of the same size. The cannon ball is highhigh density and the tennis ball is low density.
Well, density is a ratio. Therefore the density of the material would be 1g/mL .
In science, volume is always measured with liters.