The density of water changes at different temperatures. As temperature goes up, density goes down.
A solid or liquid would not change in density because the volume would not change. The density of a gas would increase when cooled and decrease when heated provided the volume is allowed to change as a function of temperature. However, density of a gas is generally not measured because it is not a useful metric to use.* * * * *That is a rubbish answer.Almost all solids or liquids expand when heated. (Pure water under "normal" circumstances has an anomalous phase between 0 and 4 deg C). So heating will increase the volume thereby decrease the density.
Yes. Density is mass/volume so if mass increases so does density if volume does not change
Density = mass / volume. So if the volume changes, the density will obviously also change.
it liquifies.
Density = mass / volume, so to change density you need to change the mass within a fixed volume or the volume of a fixed mass. Increasing the mass or decreasing the volume will increase the pressure by a linear degree, so no, the density of a gas is very easy to change. E.G.: Decreasing the volume by 1.0% will increase the density by 1.1%. Increasing the mass by 1.0% will increase the density by 1.0%.
The volume of a substance increases when heated, causing a decrease in density.
No, the volume it occupies and the density will change however the mass will remain constant
The volume of a substance increases when heated
A solid or liquid would not change in density because the volume would not change. The density of a gas would increase when cooled and decrease when heated provided the volume is allowed to change as a function of temperature. However, density of a gas is generally not measured because it is not a useful metric to use.* * * * *That is a rubbish answer.Almost all solids or liquids expand when heated. (Pure water under "normal" circumstances has an anomalous phase between 0 and 4 deg C). So heating will increase the volume thereby decrease the density.
Density = mass / volume. So if the volume changes, the density will obviously also change.
Temprature affects the volume, since most objects expand when they are heated. And density is mass / volume.
Temprature affects the volume, since most objects expand when they are heated. And density is mass / volume.
Temprature affects the volume, since most objects expand when they are heated. And density is mass / volume.
You can change the density of a substance by changing its volume. Density is equivalent to mass over volume. So changing the volume affects density.
It won't change. Density is volume divided by mass, so if volume doesn't change, density doesn't change unless you change the mass of the object.
The density decreases by half. You find the answer by knowing that density is equal to mass divided by the volume. If the mass stays constants and the volume is doubled, then the density is halved.
yes because density = volume/mass