density = weight/volume
100/200=0.5gm/ml
The mass of liquid is 5.760g - 4.570g = 1.190 grams. The volume is 3.360 millilitres. The density is mass/volume = 1.190g/3.360mL = 0.354166 ~ 0.3542gmL-1.
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Question as asked cannot be answered. We know that the bottle can contain 500 mL of ketchup, but we don't know the volume of the material from which the bottle is made, nor the correct density (the figure given as density, 1.43 g, is actually a mass). In addition even if we assume that the figure given for density is 1.43 g/mL is an actual density, from the sentence structure we have a volume for ketchup, and a density of the material in the bottle ("density" refers back to bottle, not to ketchup—"Bottle contains ... and has a density of"). If the one who posed the question meant to write, "If a bottle contains 500 ml of ketchup, and the ketchup has a density of 1.43 g/l, what is the mass of the ketchup in the bottle in grams", then the original answer to the question 715g/mL mass = density x volume is correct.
The density of a liquid has nothing to do with its weight. The density of water is aproximately 1 gram per cubic centimeter.
A liquid (or fluid) ounce is a measure of volume. A gram is a measure of mass. Therefore, the number of grams per fluid ounce of a liquid depends on what the liquid is, specifically on what its density is.
The mass of liquid is 5.760g - 4.570g = 1.190 grams. The volume is 3.360 millilitres. The density is mass/volume = 1.190g/3.360mL = 0.354166 ~ 0.3542gmL-1.
Weigh the piece of maple (you've indicated it is about 10 grams) Completely submerge it in a liquid and measure the volume of liquid displaced Density = mass/(volume displaced) or about 10g/(volume displaced)
The definition of density is mass per unit volume. Thus, you measure the volume of a liquid in mls, and then weight that volume in grams. You thus obtain grams/volume, and that is the density expressed as grams per ml.
It's (the total mass of the liquid, in grams)/10 grams per cm3
It depends on the density of the liquid.
Density = Mass/Volume so Volume = Mass/Density. Having said that, density is not measured in grams so it cannot be 0.789 grams. As a result, the question cannot be answered.
Density = Mass/Volume = 150g/50mL = 3 grams per millilitre.
The liquid's density is about 1.234 g/mL This is because to find the density you have to divide the mass by the volume.
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The density is 0,396 g/cm3.
you need the density of the liquid. if the density is 1g/ml, 25ml = 25g
Question as asked cannot be answered. We know that the bottle can contain 500 mL of ketchup, but we don't know the volume of the material from which the bottle is made, nor the correct density (the figure given as density, 1.43 g, is actually a mass). In addition even if we assume that the figure given for density is 1.43 g/mL is an actual density, from the sentence structure we have a volume for ketchup, and a density of the material in the bottle ("density" refers back to bottle, not to ketchup—"Bottle contains ... and has a density of"). If the one who posed the question meant to write, "If a bottle contains 500 ml of ketchup, and the ketchup has a density of 1.43 g/l, what is the mass of the ketchup in the bottle in grams", then the original answer to the question 715g/mL mass = density x volume is correct.