80g /20cm3 = 4g/cm3
To get the density, just divide the mass by the volume.
The density of any object is equal to its mass divided by its volume. At a mass of 129.6 kilograms and a volume of 144 liters, the substance has a density of .9 kilograms per liter.
Density is the measure of mass per unit volume. Volume cannot be measured in centimetres (cm). Without a measure of volume, the answer is indeterminate.
Density = mass / volume. If you mean 4 _cubic_ centimetres, the density is 11.3 grams per cubic centimetre. This is the density of lead.
Volume cannot be measured in centimetres. Without the volume in appropriate units, the question makes no sense and so cannot be answered.
To get the density, just divide the mass by the volume.
The density of any object is equal to its mass divided by its volume. At a mass of 129.6 kilograms and a volume of 144 liters, the substance has a density of .9 kilograms per liter.
To answer this the volume is needed, expressed in millilitres or cubic centimetres.
Density is the measure of mass per unit volume. Volume cannot be measured in centimetres (cm). Without a measure of volume, the answer is indeterminate.
Density is a measure of mass per unit volume. Volume cannot be measured in centimetres and so this question makes no sense and cannot be answered.
density = mass/volume = 41.2 g / 8.2 units³ ≈ 5.02 g/unit³
6 mL = 6 cc (cubic centimetres). Density = Mass/Volume = 57/6 = 9.5 g/cc
The answer is that you need to find the volume in cubic units, not centimetres!
Density = mass / volume. If you mean 4 _cubic_ centimetres, the density is 11.3 grams per cubic centimetre. This is the density of lead.
Volume cannot be measured in centimetres. Without the volume in appropriate units, the question makes no sense and so cannot be answered.
Volume cannot be measured in grams per cubic centimetres, density can.
Density is measured in grams per cubic centimetre (or kg per m3); cubic centimetres, by themselves, are a measure of volume - not density. The density of water is 1 g/cm3