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The density of the object can be calculated by dividing the mass by the volume. In this case, the density would be 5 g/ 10 ml = 0.5 g/ml.
Density = mass / volume. If you mean 4 _cubic_ centimetres, the density is 11.3 grams per cubic centimetre. This is the density of lead.
Density = Mass divided by Volume. 39.943 divided by 22.7 = about 1.76.
The object's density is 5 g/mL
30/10 = 3.0 grams per cc
The object's density is 10 g/cm3
density = mass/volume density = 5/10 = 0.5 grams per cubic centimeter
5
3 g/10 cm3 = 0.3 g/cm3 and this is the density, since density is expressed as mass/volume.
The density of the object is 5 g/mL
Since density = mass/volume, D = 25/10 = 2.5g/cm^3
density = mass ÷ volume = 30 g ÷ 10 cm3 = 3 g/cm3
the density of an object that is 10 cm by 2 cm and has a mass 400g will be 10000 Kg m-3. This can be calculated by the formula, density = mass/volume
The density of the object can be calculated by dividing the mass by the volume. In this case, the density would be 5 g/ 10 ml = 0.5 g/ml.
Not necessarily, it would depend on the density of the object. Density = mass / volume. So, you could have something like this. Density of A = 10 g/mL, volume of A = 1 mL. Density of B = 1 g/mL, volume = 5mL. The volume of A < B, however, the mass of A > B.
Density is 2 kg/mL
Density = mass / volume. If you mean 4 _cubic_ centimetres, the density is 11.3 grams per cubic centimetre. This is the density of lead.