Not only the density decides the situation. The shape is also important. Because when the liquid displaced is heavier than the weight of the body put in the liquid then it starts floating. This is how ships are floating is sea water
8 grams/4 cubic centimeters = 2 grams per cubic centimeter
The density of Freon is 1.494 grams per cubic centimeter.
This depends on the volume and density.
The density of gold is 19.30 grams per cubic centimeter.
no
8 grams/4 cubic centimeters = 2 grams per cubic centimeter
Divide the mass of the object by the object's volume. For example, a 20 cubic centimeter block that weighs 40 grams would have a density of 2 grams per cubic centimeter (or milliliter), or abreviated as 2g/mL
density = mass/volume density = 5/10 = 0.5 grams per cubic centimeter
Divide the number of grams by the density (the density of lead is about 11 grams/cubic centimeter - look it up if you need more precision). If the density is in grams/cubic centimeter, the answer is the volume in cubic centimeters.
Uh. No. That would be 196 grams.
density = mass/volume density = grams/ cubic centimeter 1 cubic centimeter = 1 milliliter density = 17.84/15 = 1.19 grams/milliliter
Density is the weight of an object per unit of volume. For instance, the density of gold is 19 grams per cubic centimeter. To calculate the density of an object divide the weight of the object by the volume.
Platinum has a density of 21.090 grams per cubic centimeter. Titanium has a density of 4.507 grams per cubic centimeter.
1.28 grams per cubic centimeter
-- Take an object or a sample of a substance-- Measure its mass, and express the result in grams-- Measure its volume, and express the result in cubic centimeters-- Divide the mass by the volume. The result of the division is the density of the object or substance,expressed in "grams per cubic centimeter".
The density of Freon is 1.494 grams per cubic centimeter.
no, grams per cubic centimeter.