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Q: You make the following measurements of an object 42 kg and 22 m3 What would the object density?
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What two measurements would you use to calculate the velocity of an object?

Time and distance.


What would cause and object to float on fluid?

An object would float on a fluid if the density of the object was less than the density of the fluid.


How would you calculate the density of an object?

Density is the ratio of mass to volume. Thus, the density of an object is the mass of the object divided by its volume.


What is volume weight and density?

volume is how much space is in an object (an object with more volume would be bigger) weight is how heavy an object feels due to gravity (an object with more weight would be harder to lift) density is how much matter is in an amount of space (an object with more density would weigh as much as an object with less density but in a smaller space/volume)


What would be the density of object that has a volume of 25 and of 5 grams?

What would be the density of an object that has a volume of 25 cm3 and 5 grams?


In order for an object to have neutral buoyancy what would the relationship between the density of the object and the density of the fluid have to be?

They have to be the same.


How would you calculate the density if the object is cube?

The shape of an object is not enough to calculate its density. You also need its mass and then Density = Mass/Volume.


What is density in everyday terms?

Density is how well an object would float when put into water. Water has a density of 1, so if the object floats, it's density is less then 1. If the object sinks, then it's density is greater then 1.


Why do you have to measure the mass before determining the density?

You have to measure mass before determining density because of the equation D=M/V. If you are somehow unable to find the mass, you can always use an inverse of the equation if you have the measurements of volume and density, which would equal M=DxV.ANS2:You don't need to know the mass if you can measure the object's buoyancy in a liquid whose density is known. For instance: If 10% of an object protrudes from the surface of a liquid with the density of 1g/cm3 (water at 4 deg C) then you know that the density of the object is 10% less than the density of that liquid.


What would happen if you tried to find the density of an object with a density less than water?

If an object was less denser than water it would float


Would a object with the density of 3.8 float?

There is no answer to this question as the 3.8 has no units and there is no mention of what the object would be in.


If the density of an object is 1 then will that object sink or float?

The object would float in the middle if it was in water.