Density=mass/volume. Unanswerable without knowing the volumes (or enough information to find their volumes) of the objects.
If the mass increases, the density decreases. If the mass decreases, the density decreases.
You need to know the density of the material. Multiply the volume by the density will give you the mass
if you want to calculate mass with volume density it is easy. there is this thing called the magic triangle. it goes mass over volume beside density mass=volume x density volume= mass/density density= mass/volume if you get that it is simple
mass is how much somthing weighs and volumes is how much liquid an object can hold
No. Mass is better. The same amount of mass can occupy different volumes.
mass is weight. volume accounts for size. density of items change therefore masses are not the same as volumes
The term for anything that has mass is "matter."
Density is a measure of how tightly packed the mass of an object is within its volume. If two objects have the same mass but different volumes, the object with the smaller volume will have a higher density as the mass is concentrated in a smaller space. Conversely, the object with the larger volume will have a lower density as the mass is spread out over a larger area.
Different metals have different volumes for the same mass.
For simplicity, take equal volumes of each, and measure which one of them has the greater mass or weight. You can even take different volumes, and just use the definition of density, as mass / volume.
The density of an object is the ratio of its mass to its volume. Equivalently, it is its mass per unit volumes. In mathematical terms, Density = Mass/Volume