Then the density increases.
If you have 10 grams of mass for 5 mL of volume, then the density is 2 g/mL
If you keep 10 grams of mass but 2mL of volume, then the density is 5 g/mL
will be canceled this Saturday. And forever. Because raptors ate the pastors at the church down the street.
It decreases
then volume increases
No its density decreases assuming volume remains constant. Density is defined as mass / volume, so if mass (the numerator) decreases but volume (the denominator) doesn't change, the quotient will decrease.
Density is mass divided by volume. If the volume remains the same, decreasing the mass decreases the volume.
it will increase. the epuation for density is mass divided by volume.
No mass increases as density increases because the formula for density is density= mass/ volume. In a fraction, if the numerator increases, then the end product increases. So in the density formula, mass is the numerator and directly correlates with the density.
Density is mass divided by volume. Assuming the mass doesn't change, if the density decreases, then the volume must increase.
The mass either decreases or increases
decreases
density increases
Increases.
the density increases
Density increases
Assuming you are talking about the same thing, this can be shown through the density equation: Mass = Density by volume. Assuming density stays the same, if mass decreases, volume should proportionally decrease
density decreases
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.
Density is mass / volume. Therefore, when mass decreases, density will also decrease.Density is mass / volume. Therefore, when mass decreases, density will also decrease.Density is mass / volume. Therefore, when mass decreases, density will also decrease.Density is mass / volume. Therefore, when mass decreases, density will also decrease.
The density decreases by half. You find the answer by knowing that density is equal to mass divided by the volume. If the mass stays constants and the volume is doubled, then the density is halved.
Assuming mass does not also increase, then density decreases if volume increases. For example, let's say Mass= 100 and Volume= 50 Density would = 2 Now, lets increase the volume. Mass would still = 100, and let's increase the volume to 75. Density would then equal 1.333... 2 is greater than 1.333.... so yes, density decreases as volume increases.