When heating metal, its volume typically expands due to thermal expansion, which causes the atoms in the metal to vibrate more and spread out. The mass of the metal will not change during heating unless there is a chemical reaction taking place, such as oxidation.
-- Get a pure piece of it. The size of the piece doesn't matter. -- Measure the mass of the piece. -- Measure the volume of the piece. -- The density of the substance is mass of the piece/volume of the piece.
The density of the metal is 8750 kg/m³. Density is calculated by dividing the mass of an object by its volume.
If you change the mass of a fluid while keeping the volume constant, the density of the fluid will change. Density is calculated as mass divided by volume, so if the mass changes but the volume stays the same, the density will increase if the mass increases and decrease if the mass decreases.
To determine the density of a metal, you need to know its mass (in grams) and its volume (in cubic centimeters). Density is calculated by dividing the mass of the metal by its volume.
To change the density of an object, you can either change its mass or volume. Increasing mass while keeping volume constant will increase density, while increasing volume while keeping mass constant will decrease density. Density is calculated as mass divided by volume.
Mass
Density is the mass of the object divided by its volume. By this principle, to determine the density of a metal, place the metal onto a scale to measure its mass. After this, place the metal into a beaker of water and measure the volume change in the beaker. Divide the mass by the volume and you get the density.
A sample of an unknown metal has a mass of 35.4g and a volume of 3.11cm^3. The metal is Lead.
When steel (or indeed anything) is heated its mass does not change. Volume is altered by cooling and heating. In this case the volume of the steel would increase.
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.
Anything that has mass and volume is matter. Metals have mass and volume, therefore they are matter.
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.
Volume = mass/volume = 500g/10cm3 = 50g/cm3
Your question isn't specific enough. Depending on the type of metal the mass will be different and the volume will change. Heavier metals will have less volume for those 10 grams, while a lighter metal would require more volume to achieve the same 10 grams.
Yes. Density is mass/volume so if mass increases so does density if volume does not change
Heating a metal in a crucible can cause the metal to react with the surrounding gases. thus, when weighing the metal after heating, the mass increases because of the addition of the gaseous elements
-- Get a pure piece of it. The size of the piece doesn't matter. -- Measure the mass of the piece. -- Measure the volume of the piece. -- The density of the substance is mass of the piece/volume of the piece.