"Mass to volume" indicates that the volume is the denominator, so that if the volume is made smaller the ratio gets larger (assuming the mass stays the same), and if the volume is made larger the ratio gets smaller.
It is the mass in that volume. There is no special name unless the volume happens to be a unit volume on some measurement scale.
Mass and volume. You divide the mass by the volume to get density with the corresponding units. Mass and volume. Density = mass/volume Often, mass is in grams and volumes in milliliters. Water has a density of 1g/ml. Air has a density of about 0.0013g/ml. Lead has a density of 11.34g/ml.
D=m/v Density=mass/volume de= ma/vo Density = Mass/Volume
Yes, very good. Volume is mass divided by density.
Mass is kilograms Volume is cubic meters
If the volume of an object increases, and the mass remains the same, the density of the object will decrease. This is because density is calculated as mass divided by volume, so if volume increases and mass stays the same, density decreases.
Density = mass / volume. Therefore, if volume increases and mass doesn't change, density will obviously decrease.
It is the mass in that volume. There is no special name unless the volume happens to be a unit volume on some measurement scale.
Volume of anything = (its mass) divided by (its density) regardless of what shape it happens to be.
must decrease
If the volume is tripled while mass remains constant, the density (mass/volume) of the object decreases. This means that the object becomes less dense as the same amount of mass becomes spread over a larger volume.
If the volume is tripled, the mass will stay the same as long as the substance remains constant. Mass is an intrinsic property of matter and is not affected by the volume it occupies. The density of the substance will decrease as the volume increases.
the density increases
When mass increases and volume stays constant, the density increases. When volume increases and mass stays constant the density decreases. When they both change, then the density will depend on the rate of change of mass and the rate of change of volume.
It can; density is the mass of an object divided by its volume. Increasing its mass could increase its density--it depends on what happens to the volume as well.
The mass either decreases or increases
The volume increases by a factor of (3)3 = 27 times.