Its the same, even though the mass is smaller, so is the volume, there for the mass to volume ratio stays the same when you cut it in half.
Diedrick Crayon has written: 'The return of the Half Moon'
It's identical. (assuming that the object is homogeneous)
The diameter of a crayon is 5/16 of an inch.
5 gramme
A gram is a unit of mass. A litre is a unit of capacity. Without a measure of density to compare, the two units are incompatible.
The density of something is the mass divided by the volume, so if you cut the item in half, it will not change the density at all. Instead, the two halves of the item will have the same density.
It is going to need to be divide by the original density and then after you find that out you get your answer.
before or after the three year old eats half of it?
Canada's population density is quite dense. The density is densely condensed into one densely dense country. The population density is dense enough to form a flaming ball of people if a single fart is lit on fire. and on a whole other note, yes, it is possible to light farts on fire. But back onto density. Ah yes, density, how dense can the population get? well if you squished the whole population of Canada together and rolled them all up into one big dense ball, it would be half the size of 'mericas dense ball. Then we would have some foreign dude come and light them in a blaze and the fire that gets the biggest, that country will have the smallest population density. you are welcome :)
That's not true at all. The whole idea of density is that it doesn't depend on the size of the sample; big samples and small samples of the same substance have the same density. If the whole object and a piece of it have different densities, then you can bet the composition of the piece is different from the composition of the whole thing. Example: The whole object ... a rock glued to a surfboard ... has low density and floats. One piece of it ... the rock ... has high density and sinks. (Another piece ... the surfboard ... is even less dense than the complete object, and floats even better.)
Whole Whole Half Whole Whole Whole Half
Whole, whole, half, whole, whole, whole, half.WWHWWWH