Mass is the amount of substance an object, Volume is how much space an object displaces (or takes up) in space, and density is how much mass is packed into that volume, also density is how tight atoms are packed together
Volume is the amount of space that is occupied by something. Density is the amount of mass that occupies a given volume and is indicated by mass per unit of volume, such as g/cm3, g/mL, and kg/m3.
Volume is how much space matter takes up. Density is how much mass is in a given volume. In other words, density is how heavy something is compared to how big it is.
Volume is the amount of space an object takes up, and density is the amount of mass that is packed into that space.
Volume is the amount of space a substance occupies. Density is the mass per unit of volume of a substance and is determined by dividing the mass of a substance by its volume. (d=m/v)
Specific Volume is the reciprocal of the Density :))
No, density is the degree of consistency measured by the quantity of mass per unit volume.
Density is mass per unit volume. It is directly proportional to mass and inversely proportional to the volume of an object.
The density of an object is a measure of how tightly matter is packed in it. It is measured by mass/volume. The volume of an object is the measure of space that it occupies.
Density is dependent on two things - the volume of the object under consideration, and it's mass. For a given material, in order for the volume (the size) to change, so must the mass by a proportional amount. Therefore, for a specific material, changing the size of the sample does not affect the density in any way.
Measure out a specific volume of water, such as 100mL. Determine the mass of that volume of water. Density = mass/volume, so divide the mass by the volume, and you will have the density.
The "specific Volume" of a substance is its volume per unit mass, measured in cubicmeters per kilogram. NT: to find density of any substance is the reciprocal of its specific volume. : density = 1/specific vol. kg/m3(unit)
Relative density, or specific gravity, is the ratio of the density (mass of a unit volume) of a substance to the density of a given reference material. Specific gravity usually means relative density with respect to water.
0.000826lbft is the specific volume of tungsten
Density is mass divided by volume (D = m/V); in other words, density is the mass of an object in a specific volume.
Density is dependent on two things - the volume of the object under consideration, and it's mass. For a given material, in order for the volume (the size) to change, so must the mass by a proportional amount. Therefore, for a specific material, changing the size of the sample does not affect the density in any way.
Measure out a specific volume of water, such as 100mL. Determine the mass of that volume of water. Density = mass/volume, so divide the mass by the volume, and you will have the density.
The "specific Volume" of a substance is its volume per unit mass, measured in cubicmeters per kilogram. NT: to find density of any substance is the reciprocal of its specific volume. : density = 1/specific vol. kg/m3(unit)
Density = mass/volume or D=m/v
Relative density, or specific gravity, is the ratio of the density (mass of a unit volume) of a substance to the density of a given reference material. Specific gravity usually means relative density with respect to water.
No. Specific volume is the inverse of density. Molar volume specific volume divided by mols. (i.e. g/(mLxMols)
Relative density, is also called specific gravity, and it is the ratio of the density (mass/volume) of a substance to the density of a particular reference substance, usually water. So, where density has the units of mass/volume, relative density (specific gravity) is unitless.
density = mass/volume. The unit of density is kg/m3
Raise it to the power of minus one. Specific volume is volume per unit mass, density is mass per unit volume. They are multiplicative inverses of one another.
Gram is a unit of mass. Milliliter is a unit of volume. The way they relate is by the density of the specific substance. Density = mass/volume, so if you know mass and density, then volume = mass/density.
0.000826lbft is the specific volume of tungsten