The question cannot be answered because its basic assertion not true. If the mass of a gas in a closed container is increased, then the density of the gas WILL increase.
No mass increases as density increases because the formula for density is density= mass/ volume. In a fraction, if the numerator increases, then the end product increases. So in the density formula, mass is the numerator and directly correlates with the density.
density is mass per unit volume, meaning that as mass increases ,the density increases. Unlike volume, as it increases the density decreases.
Density is mass divided by volume, so if mass increases but volume stays the same, then density also increases.
Density increases
Density = mass / volume. Therefore, if volume increases and mass doesn't change, density will obviously decrease.
When mass increases and volume stays constant, the density increases. When volume increases and mass stays constant the density decreases. When they both change, then the density will depend on the rate of change of mass and the rate of change of volume.
Density is defined as mass per unit volume. Therefore, if the volume is kept constant, density increases if mass increases.
If the mass increases, the density decreases. If the mass decreases, the density decreases.
Density = Mass/Volume As salt(mass) increases and the volume remains the same, density also increases.
density is mass over volume. if the mass increases then the volume increases proportionately.
the density increases
Since Density=Volume/Mass, and the mass increases as the volume increases they will always have the same density no matter how big it is.