they are equivalent, if is 1g/cm3 then it has a density of 1 tonne/m2 (also 1 kg/litre)
Density is mass per unit volume - so pick a unit of mass and another of distance and you have a unit of density - grammes per cubic mile, ounces per cubic inch, tonnes per cubic fathom. The only common one is grammes per cubic centimetre.
If the volume stay the same, i.e 256 cubic centimeters then the density will be 2.34g/cubic centremeter. However if the the volume changes because it is the same material then the density will be 1.17g/cubic centimeter as calculated by density= mass/volume
The density is 10.56/3 = 3.52 grammes per c.c.
The density is 45/15 = 3 grammes per cubic centimetre.
To convert tonnage to cubic yards, you need to know the density of the material. The formula to convert tonnage to cubic yards is: (Tonnage / Density) * 1.35. This formula assumes a standard density of 1.35 tons per cubic yard.
None. Cubic inches is a measure of volume and grammes is a measure of weight. You cannot convert incompatible units.
To convert cubic meters to tonnes, you need to know the density of the material you are measuring. Multiply the volume in cubic meters by the density in tonnes per cubic meter to get the weight in tonnes. The formula is: weight (tonnes) = volume (cubic meters) * density (tonnes per cubic meter).
Not sure that anything has a volume of a cubic centremeter, since there is no such measure. Cubic centimetre, yes. Density = Mass/Volume = 27 g / 10 cc = 2.7 grams per centimetre.
density = mass divided by volume = 100/25 = 4 grammes per cubic centimetre.
To convert cubic meters to weight, you need to know the density of the substance you are measuring. Multiply the volume in cubic meters by the density in kilograms per cubic meter to get the weight in kilograms. Alternatively, you can use specific gravity if the substance is a liquid.
To convert mass (kg) to volume (cubic meters), you need to know the density of the substance. Without the density, you cannot accurately convert 400 kg to cubic meters. Density is needed to convert mass to volume.
Divide by its density.