Kiakas in deh monin
Density is calculated using the formula Density = Mass / Volume. To find the density for the given values of 252mL and 500g, divide the mass by volume. Density = 500g / 252mL = 1.98 g/mL.
Volume = mass/volume = 500g/10cm3 = 50g/cm3
The ball's volume is 0.25 L
500g
Yes, 500g of water occupies a volume of 500ml, as 1g of water is equivalent to 1ml. Therefore, the volume of 500g of water is 500ml, not 50ml.
You don't. 500g of lead is much smaller in volume than, say 500g in feathers. Both weigh the same but take up vastly different volume measurements. You need to refine your question.
The 500g sample of zinc metal is more dense because density is a property of a material and does not depend on the amount of the substance. Density is defined as mass divided by volume, so for the same material, the one with higher mass will be more dense.
500g of metal is heavier than 500g of cotton because metal is denser and has a higher mass-to-volume ratio. The weight of an object is determined by its mass, and in this case, the metal would weigh more than the cotton due to its higher density.
The volume cannot be 25 cm, since that is not a volume measure. Assuming the volume is 25 cm3, Density = mass/volume = 500 g / 25 cm3 = 20 grams per cm3
D=m/v3 cm = .03 m (get base unit)15/.03= 500g/mWRONG!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!density=mass / volume so that would be fifteen divided by three wich is five
I'm sorry, but your question is a bit unclear. Grams are a unit of mass, not length. If you are asking about the length of a specific material that weighs 500g, you would need to know the density of that material to calculate its length. The formula for this calculation would involve dividing the mass (500g) by the density of the material in grams per cubic centimeter (g/cm³) to determine its volume, and then you could potentially calculate the length depending on the shape of the material.
Both samples have the same density because they are made of the same material, zinc metal. Density is a property of the material and is independent of the quantity of the material present. Density is determined by the mass and volume of the material, not the amount of the material.