In the SI system the unit is kg/m3; in practice g/cm3 is used.
Density is not a derived unit.. It is a physical quantity and hence is a derived quantity.. the unit of density kgm-3 or gcm-3 is a derived unit because it can be expressed as the quotient of base units. In general, a unit is said to be derived if it can be expressed as the product and/or quotient of base units.
a fundamental unit is kg or m - (also seconds, amps, candela and moles). Density is kg/m3 and is thus derived.
The mass is obviously a base unit. From mass we can derive many units like momentum, force etc. But we cannot derive the unit of mass from any other unit. So, it's a base unit. Technically, mass is not a unit. In the most commonly used systems of units, MKS and cgs, units of mass (kilograms and grams, respectively), are base units.
Density unit is mass / volume. SI unit for dendity is kg/m3.
Unit of density is 1kg/1000 cm3 because Density = Mass/Volume
Density is not a derived unit.. It is a physical quantity and hence is a derived quantity.. the unit of density kgm-3 or gcm-3 is a derived unit because it can be expressed as the quotient of base units. In general, a unit is said to be derived if it can be expressed as the product and/or quotient of base units.
grams per CC
a fundamental unit is kg or m - (also seconds, amps, candela and moles). Density is kg/m3 and is thus derived.
The SI unit for density is kg/m3 (or g/cm3, Mg/m3).
That will obviously depend on the system of units chosen. In the SI (International System), it is a derived unit (mass divided by volume).
The mass is obviously a base unit. From mass we can derive many units like momentum, force etc. But we cannot derive the unit of mass from any other unit. So, it's a base unit. Technically, mass is not a unit. In the most commonly used systems of units, MKS and cgs, units of mass (kilograms and grams, respectively), are base units.
Unit of length is m and that of mass is kg Now volume is length x length x lenght. SO volume would have the unit mxmxm = m3 Density = mass / volume So unit for density = kg /m3
The unit of density is kilograms per cubic meter (kg/m^3) or grams per cubic centimeter (g/cm^3). The unit of relative density, also known as specific gravity, is dimensionless as it is the ratio of the density of a substance to the density of a reference substance (typically water).
Density unit is mass / volume. SI unit for dendity is kg/m3.
"kilometer" is a unit of length or distance, not a unit of density.
no
The SI unit for density is kg/m3In the CGS system, it is g/cci have no idea:P