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The density is (32)/(the length of each edge of the cube)3
Multiply the volume of the cube by its density.
Density isn't determined by the size of the specimen but by its mass per unit of volume. An oak branch has the same density as the whole tree it came from--the weights are vastly different, but density is the same.
Density = mass/volume Density of the cube = 8g/2cm3 = 4g/cm3
That completely depends on the volume of the cube.
-- The aggregate density of the wood block is 700/1000 = 0.7 the density of water. -- So, as soon as the wood has displaced 0.7 of its volume in water, it has displaced its entire weight in water, and floats. -- The wood floats with 0.7 of its volume below the surface and 0.3 of its volume above it.
0.8 gm per cm3
If the mass of the cube is 96 g, what is the density of the cube material?
No. Each piece of the cube would have the same density.
Neither. Since they both have a weight of 1kg one cannot be heavier than the other.
Mass and volume are not determined by density. Rather density is determined by mass and volume
The density is (32)/(the length of each edge of the cube)3
Relative density is determined by the ratio of the density of a substance to the density of a reference substance.
Multiply the volume of the cube by its density.
Density isn't determined by the size of the specimen but by its mass per unit of volume. An oak branch has the same density as the whole tree it came from--the weights are vastly different, but density is the same.
B/c the density of the ice cube is greater than the density of the air.
Its density is 2g/cms3