No. D=m/v and no measurement is exact due to uncertainty.
Evaluate is the word used for judging or analysing anything to get the exact result by using the proper methods....
Compression
Total number of people divided by the total land area. also known as arithmetic density
A value that you think some object is worth.
Relative density, is also called specific gravity, and it is the ratio of the density (mass/volume) of a substance to the density of a particular reference substance, usually water. So, where density has the units of mass/volume, relative density (specific gravity) is unitless.
"Vague density" typically refers to a lack of clarity or precision in expressing the density of a particular substance or object. It may suggest uncertainty or imprecision in the measurement or description of density, making it difficult to determine the exact value.
The definition of dinsity is wieght
the exact density of water is 1
Because that's the man-made definition of "density".
A definition doesn't exist for low density. The values depends on the application or material.
A definition of lower density doesn't exist. Solids with densities under 1,00 g/cm3have a very low density.
The definition of density is: Density = (Mass) divided by (Volume).A simple algebraic operation rearranges this definition to give: Mass = (Density) times (Volume)
An outlier, in a set of data, is an observation whose value is distant from other observations. There is no exact definition but one commonly used definition is any value that lies outside of Median ± 3*IQR IQR = Inter-Quartile Range.
The density of anything is the ratio of the weight (really the mass) to the volume that the material occupies. Water was involved in the original definition of units of mass and volume, so it has a rather special value of density. To a good approximation, the density of water is 1 gram per milliliter.
Evaluate is the word used for judging or analysing anything to get the exact result by using the proper methods....
Depends on your exact definition of a computer.
-- end of the universe -- the day you will die -- the exact value of 'pi' -- the exact value of ' e ' -- the exact value of sqrt(2) -- the exact value of any other irrational number