If the density is lower in one, the mass will be lower. ex water's volume is 1 divide by it's mass 1. that's means it's density is 1 g/ml. ice's volume is 1 divide by it's mass 1 = 1.162790698, making it's density 0.86. I wrote the answer that says: ice's mass and volume = 1. that is wrong. The real answer is:If the density is lower in one, the mass will be lower. ex water's volume is 1ml divide by it's mass 1g. that's means it's density is 1 g/ml. ice's volume is 1ml, divide by it's mass 0.86g to equal 0.86g/ml. this is right.
Because the density is defined as the quotient of those numbers, and
(4 trillion) divided by (1 trillion)
is exactly the same quotient as
(4) divided by (1) .
Different materials have different densities, which means the amount of matter in a given space. Consider a paper plate and a glass plate. They might be roughly the same volume, but the glass plate is much heavier. Glass has higher density than paper, and therefore more mass in the same volume.
because they are made of different substances
I assume they have different densities, i.e., are made up of different materials. Same volume does NOT mean same mass. The relationship is: mass = volume x density
Yes they can, if they have different densities.
Of course. A big party balloon, a basketball, and a bowling ball all have roughly the same volume, but their masses are very different.
No
when you are comparing 3 objects of the same volume but different masses, which ever one is the heaviest, is the most dense and the lightest is the least dense. This is because Denisty= Mass ÷ Volume and when the volumes are the same, you just need to compare the masses.
I assume they have different densities, i.e., are made up of different materials. Same volume does NOT mean same mass. The relationship is: mass = volume x density
Their masses are different. (Mass = density * volume)
If two solids have the same masses but different volumes they have different densities.
Though they have same volume,they have different masses.
Yes they can, if they have different densities.
Although they have different masses (meaning one is denser than the other), they will take up exactly the same amount of space because they have the same volume.
Comparing density
Of course. A big party balloon, a basketball, and a bowling ball all have roughly the same volume, but their masses are very different.
No
A spoon is a measure of volume. Different substances have different densities so that the same volume of two substances can have very different masses.
Ceratinly. It depends on their densities.
the two objects in question have different densities. The denser object has more mass.