If you could show me the block of wood, then I could measure it and answer your question. For that matter, if you have the block of wood, you could measure it and answer your own question.
The weight of water displaced by the floating block of wood is exactly equal to the weight of the ENTIRE block of wood, regardless of how much of the wood is above the water level.
All you have to do is measure is side of the wood (length, width, height) in your preferred unit of measurement (cm, in) and then multiply the three values together. This will give you a cubic answer (cm cubed, in cubed).
To find the mass of a block of wood you should use a triple beam balance.
Density of wood = mass/volume
If you could show me the block of wood, then I could measure it and answer your question. For that matter, if you have the block of wood, you could measure it and answer your own question.
Measure it.
A balance.
8 cm3
When you need to measure distance. Like, you want a certain size for a block of wood for somebody's lemonade stand. You measure the distance you want and cut it out from the rest of the block. Or you can buy it. But you have to measure either way
Yes
it is a wood
The weight of water displaced by the floating block of wood is exactly equal to the weight of the ENTIRE block of wood, regardless of how much of the wood is above the water level.
a block of wood
No because a paperclip weighs lees than a block of wood. A Block of wood falls SLOWER than a Paperclip.
wood
All you have to do is measure is side of the wood (length, width, height) in your preferred unit of measurement (cm, in) and then multiply the three values together. This will give you a cubic answer (cm cubed, in cubed).