Ah, density is like the thickness or heaviness of a liquid. Water is pretty special - it has a density of 1 gram per milliliter. So, if you have 20 milliliters of water, its density would be 20 grams. Just imagine that water hugging you with its gentle weight, like a soft cloud floating in the sky.
At standard pressure and temperature the density = 1.0.
0.9982071 g/mL @20C 0.9922187 g/mL @40C
The density of saliva is approximately 1.0 g/mL, which is similar to the density of water.
A substance with a density of 0.92 g/mL would float on water, as the density of water is approximately 1 g/mL. Objects with a density less than water will float, and those with a density greater than water will sink.
The density of acetic acid is approximately 1.049 g/mL at 20°C.
At room temperature (20 deg C), it is 160.3 ml.
At standard pressure and temperature the density = 1.0.
1ml = 1cm(squared) Density of water 1g/cm(cubed) Basically. 100ml of water = 100cm(cubed) = 100g
this is valid for water only (or any fluid with same density as water) water density (@0°C) = 1000 kg/m^3 (actual value is 999.8395 kg/m^3) = 1 g/ml volume = mass / density = (20 g) / (1 g/ml) = 20 ml
20 ml of water is about 4 teaspoons.
0.9982071 g/mL @20C
The density of water at 20 degrees Celsius is approximately 998 kg/m³.
0.9922187 g/mL @40C0.9194000 g/mL @-20C
The volume of the object is the difference in water level before and after the object is added, which is 10 ml (30 ml - 20 ml). The density of the object is mass divided by volume, so 2g / 10 ml = 0.2 g/ml. Therefore, the density of the object is 0.2 g/ml.
The density of any substance remains the sameirrespective of its volume.
The one which has a density of 2.5 g/ml (making its volume 8 ml).
0.9982071 g/mL @20C 0.9922187 g/mL @40C