Density is mass divided by volume. If the volume remains the same, decreasing the mass decreases the volume.
Yes, an object's density can be changed by altering its mass or volume. Increasing the mass while keeping the volume constant will increase the density, while decreasing the volume while keeping the mass constant will also increase density.
An object's density can change by altering its volume or mass. Increasing mass while keeping volume constant will increase density, and vice versa. Similarly, decreasing volume while keeping mass constant will increase density, and vice versa.
Density. This is quantified as a mass over a volume, so if you know the volume, the density will allow you to determine the mass of an object. Density equals mass divided by volume so mass is equal to density multiplied by volume.
Yes, if two objects have the same volume and density, they will have the same mass. This is because mass is calculated by multiplying density and volume; therefore, having the same density and volume means the objects will have the same mass.
Objects are heavier than others due to differences in their mass and density. Mass is the amount of matter in an object, while density is how compact that matter is. Objects with higher mass or higher density will be heavier than those with lower mass or lower density.
Yes, an object's density can be changed by altering its mass or volume. Increasing the mass while keeping the volume constant will increase the density, while decreasing the volume while keeping the mass constant will also increase density.
An object's density can change by altering its volume or mass. Increasing mass while keeping volume constant will increase density, and vice versa. Similarly, decreasing volume while keeping mass constant will increase density, and vice versa.
Density = mass / volume, so to change density you need to change the mass within a fixed volume or the volume of a fixed mass. Increasing the mass or decreasing the volume will increase the pressure by a linear degree, so no, the density of a gas is very easy to change. E.G.: Decreasing the volume by 1.0% will increase the density by 1.1%. Increasing the mass by 1.0% will increase the density by 1.0%.
It won't change. Density is volume divided by mass, so if volume doesn't change, density doesn't change unless you change the mass of the object.
With constant mass, a decrease in volume will increase the the density. Conversely, an increase in volume will decrease the density.
To change an object's density, you can change either its mass or volume. Increasing the mass or decreasing the volume will increase the density, while decreasing the mass or increasing the volume will decrease the density.
You can increase the density of an object with constant mass by decreasing the object's volume.
The density changes with different objects as all have different mass and volume(the space an object occupies) and the more compressed(Compact) the object is the more density it has.
Density. This is quantified as a mass over a volume, so if you know the volume, the density will allow you to determine the mass of an object. Density equals mass divided by volume so mass is equal to density multiplied by volume.
Density is mass divided by volume. So: Density= mass/volume
mass divided by volume... mass/volume=density
Yes, if two objects have the same volume and density, they will have the same mass. This is because mass is calculated by multiplying density and volume; therefore, having the same density and volume means the objects will have the same mass.