How do you expect me to know that? i would ask a scientist.
62.4
It's actually pretty easy. If the density of the substance is higher than the density of water, the object will sink. If the density of the substance is lower than the density of water, the object will float. Be aware though that various substances may have dissolved into the water, thus changing its density. For example, seawater has a different density than fresh water.
yes water can increase the density of water as wood has the power to absorb water and so the density of water is drastically increased
Pure water has a density of 1,000 kg/m3
Water has a greater density than ice.
Because the overall density of a can is less than the density of water, a solid aluminium pole has a density greater than water
It could be pounds per cubic inch, or pounds per cubic foot, or tons per cubic yard. The only substance I know in fps is water which is 62.4 pounds per cubic foot.
It could be pounds per cubic inch, or pounds per cubic foot, or tons per cubic yard. The only substance I know in fps is water which is 62.4 pounds per cubic foot.
Density of water is approximately one gram per cubic centimeter(1gm/cm3) in MKS system .Further density is dependent on temperature of water.
The value of gravity in fps system is 5.3 ft/s2.
Yes for ADNOC New HQ it's 10 fps (3 m/s ) , but usually in all other projects it between 2.5 fps- 3 fps thanks tssc
The unit for the amount of substance (mass) in the FPS system is the pound.
The same as their g/cm3 density, but with no units. It is the density of that material relative to the density of water. Since water has a density of 1g/cm3 the previous answer is correct, but it is more powerful than that. If you know the density in any unit system and divide it by the density of water in that same unit system, you will get the specific gravity.
in the metric system water has a density of 1 g/ml.
Volume and density
In SI system, unit of density is kg/m3 But no unit for relative density as it is the ratio of density of the material to that of water
Max. 32 fps ,NFPA 13 but now deleted from this standard.
Volume and density