The specific gravity of a substance is the ratio of te density of the substance to the density of water. It is, therefore, a unitless measure.
Gravitational pull is a force and is measured in Newtons, the unit of force.
A refractometer is often used to test the specific gravity of a cell.
Almost, but not quite. 'Specific gravity' is the density of a substancecompared to water.Numerically . . .Specific gravity of a substance = Density of the substance/Density of water.
If you mean the gravitatioal field - other options are possible - units of acceleration are used for that. The force of gravity, of course, is expressed in units of force.
They aren't the same thing, but they can give you the same information. Specific gravity is a substance's mass density divided by the mass density of water. Specific gravity is a sort of normalized mass density. Materials with S.G. higher than one will sink in water. S.G. lower than one will float.
The unit weight of soil with a specific gravity of 2.65 is 1.8 g/cc.
Specific gravity doesn't have units. It's the density relative to water, so specific gravity is effectively just a number.
Gravitational pull is a force and is measured in Newtons, the unit of force.
Specific gravity and density will have the same value when the two substances under investigation have identical densities. Density is an expression of the amount of mass per unit of volume that a substance exhibits. Specific gravity is a comparison of the density of a substance to the density of water.
737.22 - see http://www.simetric.co.uk/si_liquids.htm The sp. gravity of the petrol(vehicle) is 0.73722 and that of natural petrol is 0,71122 Note that specific gravity has no units.
Specific gravity I think. Start there.
Specific gravity is a unitless measure that compares the density of a substance to the density of a reference material (usually water at 4 degrees Celsius). It indicates how many times denser or lighter a substance is compared to water. The specific gravity of water is 1.
A refractometer is often used to test the specific gravity of a cell.
Density is defined as the mass per unit volume. Hence its unit is SI system is kg/m3 But specific gravity other wise known as relative density is defined as the ratio of the density of the substance to that of water. So no unit for specific gravity. Density of water is 1000 kg/ m3 Density of mercury is 13,600 kg /m3 Hence specific gravity or relative density of mercury is 13.6
Almost, but not quite. 'Specific gravity' is the density of a substancecompared to water.Numerically . . .Specific gravity of a substance = Density of the substance/Density of water.
The specific gravity of skimmed milk is greater than that of whole milk because because cream is lighter than milk, thus removing it makes the remaining liquid heavier per unit of volume. As a liquid's weight per unit of volume increases its specific gravity increases.
If you mean the gravitatioal field - other options are possible - units of acceleration are used for that. The force of gravity, of course, is expressed in units of force.