You use the density of copper, which is 8.96 g/cm cubed. Therefore 50 cm cubed would weigh 50 x 8.96 g = 44.8 g.
The mass of 1 cubic centimeter of Gold is 19.3 grams.
Gold density = 19.3 grams per cubic centimetre
how to calculate the mass of 50 cubic centimeters of gold element.
The density of pure gold is around 19.3 grams per cubic centimetre. That will be the density of a grain of gold with a mass of 1 microgram or a brick with a mass of 1 kg.
The specific gravity of gold = 19.3
Therefore the mass of 1 cu.cm. of gold will be 19.3 grammes.
1 cm3 of water weighs 1 gram. The volume is...ermm... 1 cm3
Mass = Volume X Density. The volume is 20.0 cm X 6.0 cm X 1.0 cm = 120 cm3, so the mass is 120 cm3 X 19.3 g/cm3 = 2316 grams. A rounded-off answer of 2300 grams is more appropriate, given the way that the data is presented.
It is a volume of 5 millilitres.
The definition of density is mass/volume. You have a volume (I assume) of 20cm^3, or 20 cubic centimeters, and a mass of 40 grams. You answer would therefore be 2 grams/cubic centimeter, which you can convert into your favorite units as you please. SI units would be kg/cm^3.
the moon
what is the mass of 1 -centimeter cube of gold
In order to answer the question whether 5 cm3 of silver or 5 cm3 of gold has the greatest mass, one need to know the density of each metal. It turns out the density of silver is 10.3 g/cm3 and that for gold is 19.3 g/cm3. Therefore, for silver, 5 cm3 x 10.3 g/cm3 = 51.5 g and for gold, 5 cm3 x 19.3 g/cm3 = 96.5 g. So, 5 cm3 of gold will have a greater mass (96.5 g v. 51.5 g)
To answer this question, you need to know the density of gold, which is 19.30g/cm3. The formula for density is: Density = mass/volume The given volume of gold is 1cm3. *1cc = 1cm3. Manipulate the density formula to find mass: mass = density x volume = 19.30g/cm3 x 1cm3 = 19.30g of gold
"Gram" is a unit of mass. "Cm3" is a unit of volume. So the answer depends on what substance is in the cm3 . If the cm3 is empty, then there are no grams in it. If it's full of air, then there's only a small fraction of a gram in it. If it's a cm3 of water, then there's roughly 1 gram of mass in it. If it's a cm3 of gold, then there are about 19 grams of mass in it.
The mass is 1 367 g.
Density is calculated by mass divided by volume. Mass is therefore calculated by density multiplied by volume. Make sure your units are compatible - 1L - 1000 cm3 So, gold statue's mass is 19.3 g/cm3 x 1700 cm3 = and sand's mass is 3.00 g/cm3 x 1700 cm3 =
0.737 kg. The answer is correct but i tell the calculation density=mass/volume density of petrol at 60*f=737.22 kg/cm3 1 litre=1000 cm3 (1 cm3=1/1000 litre) 737.22(kg/cm3)=mass(kg)/volume(cm3) 737.22(kg/cm3) * volume(cm3)=mass 737.22 * (1/1000 litre)=mass(kg) 0.737 kg=mass There is no conversion. One is volume and the other is mass or weight.
GoldGold is almost twice as dense as lead! The density of gold is 19.3 g/cm3 and the density of lead is only 11.34 g/cm3. For comparison the density of water is only 1 g/cm3.
1 cm3 of any two substances have the same massif both substances have the same densityy.
The nugget of gold has a volume of 2.6 cm3, and the nugget of pyrite has a volume of 10 cm3.
the mass is i gram
No