Assuming standard (pure, clean) water, and standard temperature and pressure,
the density of any amount of water is always 1.
In order to find the density of a substance, you don't need to know mass or volume.
You only need to know what the substance is. That's the whole point of 'density'.
That depends on the density (density = mass / volume). If it is water then the volume would be 75 ml or 75 cu cm.
Density equals mass divided by volume. your given examples density is .902g/cm^3. (cm^3 is interchangeable with mL) the density of this unknown liquid is close to that of water (.997g/mL) and I therefore believe it is water.
Density = Mass Density = 100g/50 cm. Density = 2g/cm3---------Volume.
this is the concept of density. the more mass contained in a certain volume, the denser the material (1 cubic cm of lead is denser than 1 cubic cm of water) Density=mass/volume
the units of density are mass/volume so anything that gives you those variables. A scale and graduated cylinder be used if you fill the cylinder with water and the monitor the displacement of the water. 1ml of water is equal to 1 cubic cm (thats volume)
Density=mass per volume =1g/cm cube density of 170mL water=170g per 170mL =1g/cm cube
Density is calculated as Mass / Volume. Therefore for an object that has a mass of 350 grams and a volume of 95 cm^3, the density would be 3.684 g/cm^3. Water has an estimated 1g/cm^3 density, therefore the density of this object is greater than that of water and would sink.
Density is calculated as Mass / Volume. Therefore for an object that has a mass of 350 grams and a volume of 95 cm^3, the density would be 3.684 g/cm^3. Water has an estimated 1g/cm^3 density, therefore the density of this object is greater than that of water and would sink.
That depends on the density (density = mass / volume). If it is water then the volume would be 75 ml or 75 cu cm.
Density equals mass divided by volume. your given examples density is .902g/cm^3. (cm^3 is interchangeable with mL) the density of this unknown liquid is close to that of water (.997g/mL) and I therefore believe it is water.
Volume is measured in cm^3, not cm! The density is 14.375 grams per cm^3.
Density = Mass Density = 100g/50 cm. Density = 2g/cm3---------Volume.
This substance has density of 18 g/cm3
Density can't be in cm ---- it's in g/cm cubed
Divide the mass by the volume and express the answer in terms of "units of mass per units of volume" - in this case, grams per cm^3..
Assuming you mean a volume of 38 cm³ (as cm are a measure of length): density = mass/volume = 277g / 38cm³ ≈ 7.289 g/cm³
There is no density that can be derived from a volume unless you know what material fills the volume. The volume in this case is 8 cc's.