It will not affect mass because the mass of an object stays the same (unless you take away or add mass). It will affect volume and density. Since the object is being flattened so it takes up less space, its volume is smaller. But since it is the same amount of matter just in a smaller space, the density is greater.
Basically, volume and density are inversely related (in respect to mass). With mass staying the same, as the volume decreases, the density increases.
it is easy. You use Mass divided by Volume. You can Remember it by a heart. The top is a M and the bottom is a V. Mass divided by volume. <3
The density of the block of wood is 0.6 g/cm^3. (Density = mass/volume)
To calculate the density of the block of wood, you would divide its mass (in grams) by its volume (in milliliters). The formula for density is: Density = Mass / Volume. Plug in the values for mass and volume to find the density of the block in g/mL.
It is the mass of the block divided by its volume.
The density of the wood block is calculated by dividing the mass by the volume, so density = mass/volume. In this case, density = 57g / 125 cm3 = 0.456 g/cm3.
To calculate the density of the block of stone, use the formula: density = mass/volume. Given that the mass is 3000 kg and the volume is 1.5 m³, the density is 3000 kg / 1.5 m³ = 2000 kg/m³. Therefore, the density of the block is 2000 kg/m³.
To determine the density of a block, you can use a balance to measure its mass and a ruler to measure its dimensions. The density of the block can then be calculated by dividing the mass by the volume.
4096 cm is not a volume, but a length. Once you know the volume, divide the mass by the volume to get the density.
The block's density is about 0.076 g/cm3
density is the product of mass and volume so its density will b 100 g/cm3..
The density of the entire ship is much less than the density of a ship-sized block of steel. That's accomplished by flattening the block of steel into a giant sheet, and then rounding the sheet on the bottom, so that it displaces much more water than the original solid block would. The final structure still has the same mass as the block of steel, but it has much more volume ... the volume of the steel, plus the additional volume of the cargo holds, the engine room, the galleys, the passenger cabins, the radio room, etc. So the original mass divided by the much greater volume winds up being a much smaller density than steel has. In fact, it winds up being smaller than the density of water.
It depends on the volume of the block and the mass. The equation D=M/V Density=mass/volume The answered is displayed as (answer) grams/(the units in which you measured the volume) I hope this helps.