Yes it is, thank you very much.
10.5 grams per cubic cm
The answer is 0.4. You take 3.6 divided by 8.2. To receive your answer! Hope this helps!
There is no unit of density but it is a measure of mass (weight) per unit of volume (space). If a brick weights 3kg and it has a volume of one thousandths of a cubic metre (.001 m3), it will have a density of 3Mg/m3 or 3 Mega grams per cubic metre. The units of density are Volume measured in cubic metres and Mass measured in grams or kg (kilograms) In the old imperial system this would be pounds per cubic foot.
Using a density of 3150 kilgrams per cubic metre = 196.65 pounds per cubic foot.
Gold has a density of 19.3 grams per cubic centimeter. Two pounds is equal to 907.185 grams. Two pounds of gold would make a cube 3.61 cm on a side.
There are 453.592 grams in a pound, so 10 pounds would be 4535.92 grams. The density of copper, the main component of pennies, is 8.96 grams per cubic centimeter. A penny has a volume of 0.36 cubic centimeters, so 4535.92 grams of pennies would have a volume of 5050.89 cubic centimeters. With 2.5 grams per penny, there would be approximately 2023 pennies in 10 pounds, which would total $20.23.
Density cannot be measured in grams, not in "per cubic centimetres".
1.78 grams per cubic centimeters equals the density of the material that the question talks about.
Uranium has a density of 19 grams per cubic centimeter, so you'll have to convert the grams to pounds and the cubic centimeters to cubic inches. Since 1g = 0.00220462280lb, then 19g = 19 x 0.00220462280lb, which = 0.041887833lb, or about .042lb. Now convert cubic centimeters to cubic inches: 1 cubic centimeter = 0.061023744100 cubic Inches = about .061 cubic inches 19g/cc is the equivalent of .042lb/.061 cubic inches, which divides out to about .69 pounds per cubic inch.
Volume cannot be measured in grams per cubic centimetres, density can.
Yes, the mass of an object with a density of 2 grams per cubic centimeter and a volume of 98 cubic centimeters would be about 196 grams.
The density is calculated by dividing the mass (75 grams) by the volume (30 cubic centimeters). Therefore, the density is 2.5 grams per cubic centimeter.
Mass per volume Mass in grams volume in cubic centimeters
Mass per volume Mass in grams volume in cubic centimeters
The density of brass typically ranges from about 8.4 to 8.7 grams per cubic centimeter. To convert this to grams per cubic inch, you can use the conversion factor of 1 cubic inch being approximately 16.387 cubic centimeters. Thus, the density of brass is approximately 0.485 to 0.530 grams per cubic inch.
The density is (408)/(the volume in cubic centimeters) grams per cubic centimeter.
The density of lead is 11340 kilograms per cubic meters or 11.34 grams per cubic centimeters.