Yes, this is because different objects have different densities. If something has a low density then you need a lot more of it in order for it to have significant weight, so it will therefore have a higher volume. Inversely, if you have an object with a high density then very little will be necessary for it to have significant weight, so since there is less of it, it will have a lower volume.
No. Mass and volume are two completely different properties.
Since density=Mass/volume. If 2 solutions have the same volumes, they would have different densities because their masses are different. More explanations. For example same volume of aluminum and iron would have different mass because the atomic mass of aluminum is comparatively less than that of iron. Aluminium has nearly mass 27 amu where as iron has 56 amu. The crystalline structure would bring the atoms with different lattice distances and so the density would differ. Answer Objects of same volume have different density because as Density is equal to mass over volume so according to this relation volume and density are inverseley propotional to each others so when we increase volume density decrease so two solutions can have same volume and different densities. I am sure you will be satisfied be sure to log on www.alislam.org
No
the volume could be different that could lead to the same density. For example: d=m/v so you would have a mass of 10 for compound A and a mass of 5 for compound B, and the volume of compound A is 2 and the volume of compound B has a volume of 1. Therefore both densities equal 5.
Any volume of non-vacuum anything has mass. Any mass has volume. Both mass and volume have an 'm' in the word. Other than that, they are not at all the same thing.
Volume. Density depends on mass and volume. Density = mass/volume. Things that have the exact same mass can have different densities if the volume associated with either are different.
different desity
No; volume and mass are different characteristics with different units of measure.. Mass = Volume x Density
I assume they have different densities, i.e., are made up of different materials. Same volume does NOT mean same mass. The relationship is: mass = volume x density
mass is weight. volume accounts for size. density of items change therefore masses are not the same as volumes
no; they have the same volume but their mass is quite different; density is mass/volume and the sponge has much lower density
Their masses are different. (Mass = density * volume)
They have different densities.
No. Mass and volume are two completely different properties.
Since density=Mass/volume. If 2 solutions have the same volumes, they would have different densities because their masses are different. More explanations. For example same volume of aluminum and iron would have different mass because the atomic mass of aluminum is comparatively less than that of iron. Aluminium has nearly mass 27 amu where as iron has 56 amu. The crystalline structure would bring the atoms with different lattice distances and so the density would differ. Answer Objects of same volume have different density because as Density is equal to mass over volume so according to this relation volume and density are inverseley propotional to each others so when we increase volume density decrease so two solutions can have same volume and different densities. I am sure you will be satisfied be sure to log on www.alislam.org
The definition of density is mass per unit volume. For any object or sample of a substance, it can be calculated as (mass) divided by (volume). If two objects or samples with the same volume have different masses, the one with the greater mass has greater density. If two objects or samples with the same mass have different volumes, the one with the greater volume has smaller density.
compaction