An extensive property as a physical quantity whose magnitude is additive for subsystems.
The value of such an additive property is proportional to the size of the system it describes, or to the quantity of matter in the system. (Definition in 'en.wikipedia.org')
An extensive property is one that depends on size or amount. Since mass will change as you change the amount of the substance, it is extensive. An example of intensive would be something like density. The density of 1 ml water is the same as the density of 100 ml or 1000 ml of water. It does NOT change or depend on the amount used.
Extensive properties are those that depend on the sample size. For example, volume, mass, etc. Something that does not depend on sample size is an intensive property. An example would be density because the density of 1 gram of something is the same as the density of 100 g of that same substance.
No.Its apart of measurment and temperature
mass
Colligative Properties
Density is an intrinsic property, not an extensive property of matter. This is because it DOES NOT depend on the size of the sample (amount). The density of a small piece of matter is the same as the density of a larger piece of that same matter.
extensive
extensive property
why electrical conductivity is an intensive property of matter
an extensive property Examples include mass and volume.
Colligative Properties
yes
Extrinsic Physical Property. <-- Physical Science Bookwork in Nova Net.
Density is an intrinsic property, not an extensive property of matter. This is because it DOES NOT depend on the size of the sample (amount). The density of a small piece of matter is the same as the density of a larger piece of that same matter.
extensive property
extensive
No, it depends upon quantity of matter so is extensive property.
Density is an intensive property because the size of the sample does not matter.
extensive property depends on on the amount of matter present such as mass, length, or volume
Mass is an extensive property, which depends only on the amount of matter in the sample, not on the composition of the sample.
There are many examples of extensive properties. Some are mass, energy content, and volume.