No.
The weight of the displaced water is 2/3 the weight of the brick. So the weight of the brick is 3/2 the weight of an equal volume of water ... just another way of saying that the density of the brick is 1.5 gm/cm3.
1375 kg/cum
Anywhere in the universe where there was some net gravitational force: however weak or strong.
How big is the block and how big is the brick?
9 kg = 19.84158 lb (1 kg = 2.20462 lb)
Weight of 1 Kg Brick = 9.8 Newtons
No
No.
1900 kg/m^3.
what is the density of a brick with a volume of 0.0010m and a mass of 1.9kg
The weight of the displaced water is 2/3 the weight of the brick. So the weight of the brick is 3/2 the weight of an equal volume of water ... just another way of saying that the density of the brick is 1.5 gm/cm3.
1375 kg/cum
By a kg I believe you mean 1 kilo... which would be the answer.
Sincerely, it is quite possible.
2 kg (1b=1kg+1/2b, 1/2b=1kg, 1b=2kg)
Remember 1000 kg = 1 tonne. 3500 g = 3.5 kg = 1 brick 6.4tonnes = 6.4x 1000 = 6400 kg. Divide 6400 / 3.5 = 1828.57 bricks NB If ordering from a builders yard/supplier you would order 2000 bricks. The balance would account for breakages/loss.