The same density of 1ml of water. (approx 1g/ml)
The density of water at 53 degrees Celsius is approximately 0.9769 grams per cubic centimeter.
The density of H2O is 0.9982g/mL at 20°C. Usually a value of 1 is used at room temperature.
Assuming a density of 1.0 g/ml for water, then 10 ml H2O = 10 g10 g H2O x 1 mol/18 g = 0.5555 moles H2O0.5555 moles x 6.02x10^23 molecules/mole = 3.34x10^23 molecules of H2O in 10 ml
mL is a measure of volumeg is a measure of massYou need to know the density of the substance you are asking about if you want to convert between volume and mass:Volume (mL) = mass (g) / density (g/mL)(To make a guess you might assume the density of Gr.Yog. to be 1.0 g/ml:then the answer is 50 mL)
You need to figure out the density of the substance you want to convert. If it is water, i.e. H2O, the conversion is a 1:1 ratio, as water has a density of 1g/ml.
That is 265 ml.
Lead has a density of approximately 11.3 g/mL, so it does not have a density of 5 g/mL. Copper has a density of 8.96 g/mL, which is closer to 5 g/mL but not exactly the same.
The density of the sample can be calculated by dividing the mass of the sample (35.4g) by its volume (36.82 mL). Density = Mass/Volume Density = 35.4g / 36.82 mL Density = 0.962 g/mL
63.2 multiplied by 0.79 = 49.928 grams If it was 63.2ml of water, the mass would be 63.2g, as water's density is 1. As alcohol is thinner than water (density less than1 ) you would expect it to weigh less than the same volume of water.
The density is calculated by dividing the mass by the volume. In this case, the density would be 1.6 g/mL (200 g / 125 mL).
29.5735296 ml/ounce so 53 ml is a whisper under 1.8 ounces.
The density of the liquid sample is 0.75 g/mL. Density is calculated by dividing the mass of the liquid sample by its volume: density = mass/volume. Given that the mass is 450 g and the volume is 600 mL, the density is 450 g / 600 mL = 0.75 g/mL.