When volume is increased two times, mass is also doubled. This is because density of a particular material always remains constant, (d=m/v), so to keep density constant, volume increase is balanced by mass increase.
The mass of a pure substance will remain constant even if the volume is increased. The mass of a substance is an intrinsic property that does not change with changes in volume.
If the Earth's volume were increased by 125 times and its mass by 25 times, the force of gravity at the surface would remain the same. This is because the force of gravity depends on the mass of an object and the distance from its center, but increasing both mass and volume proportionally cancels out any difference in gravity at the surface.
Increasing the mass of an object does not necessarily change its volume if the density remains constant. However, if the density of the object changes as a result of the increase in mass, then the volume would also change.
The mass isn't changed. Since the volume is decreased, the quantity (mass/volume) is increased, meaning that the density is increased.
If an object's mass remains constant but its volume is increased, then the density of the object decreases. This is because density is calculated by dividing an object's mass by its volume, so increasing the volume while keeping the mass constant leads to a lower density value.
I think height times width.
If the mass of an object is increased while its volume remains constant, the density of the object will also increase. Density is defined as mass divided by volume, so an increase in mass with constant volume leads to a higher density.
When mass increases and volume stays constant, the density increases. When volume increases and mass stays constant the density decreases. When they both change, then the density will depend on the rate of change of mass and the rate of change of volume.
Mass times volume isn't a formula for anything. You may be confused with mass divided by volume, which is the formula for density.
Yes. Density is mass/volume so if mass increases so does density if volume does not change
idon't know sorry
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.