Because they are of the same substance they have the same density
density = mass/volume
Gold.Explanation: Gold has a higher density than water.This means, the value of Mass/volume for gold is more than that of water.Here, the volume is same for both the substances. Then, for the density to vary, the mass should vary because volume is the same. As gold as a higher density, it has more mass than water for the same volume of the substance.
No.Grams are a measure of mass (weight); whereasmilliliters are a measure of volume.However, the two are related by density:density = mass / volume.If, and ONLY if, the substance has a density of 1g/ml (= 1 g/cm³) will its mass in grams equal its volume in milliliters.
For the same mass, yes.
15ml is the same as 15 cubic centimeters. D = M/V so the answer is 60g/15cc which equals 4 grams/cm cubed.
No. Volume = Mass / Density Therefore, for the same mass, if the density is higher then the volume is less. This makes perfect sense if you think about it. The atoms of the object are closer together (it is more dense) and so less space (volume) is taken up.
The definition of density is mass per unit volume. For any object or sample of a substance, it can be calculated as (mass) divided by (volume). If two objects or samples with the same volume have different masses, the one with the greater mass has greater density. If two objects or samples with the same mass have different volumes, the one with the greater volume has smaller density.
Density is the mass of a substance divided by the volume of that same mass of substance.
Extensive properties have to do with the amount or size of a substance. Gold and copper samples can be made to have the same mass or the same volume, or the same number of moles, or atoms.
The density of a substance is its mass divided by its volume. So for the same volume the higher the mass, the higher the density.
is it volume or is it mass in the blank
Density is simply the mass divided by volume. This means that it is the amount of the substance in a specific unit of space. Because a pure substance indicates that it is exactly that, a substance made of a specific combination of elements, it will always have the same density because those elements can only take one form in order for it to be pure.
Anything that has mass and occupies volume is called matter. In any substance its volume can vary but the mass is its intrinsic property. Mass of a particular substance remains the same anywhere we go but that is not the case for weight of a substance.
Not necessarily. The temperature of the samples would have to be the same. It can also vary with how pure the substance is.
For two liquids of the same volume, the liquid with a higher density will have greater mass. Similarly, the liquid with a greater mass has a higher density. This is only true for samples of equal volume, however.
no density would increase, mass = volume x density if we assume that the volume of the substance cannot change then the only way to increase mass would be if that substance became more dense.
Density of a substance = (mass of a sample of it)/(volume of the same sample)
No. The amount of mass in a given unit of volume is called density. Density varies depending on the substance and its temperature.