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Since density = mass/volume, D = 25/10 = 2.5g/cm^3
density = mass/volume = 36 g / 12 cm3 = 3 grams per cm3
density = mass / volume = 72 g / 36 cm³ = 2 g/cm³
density = mass/volume = 1800g/300 cm³ = 6 g/cm³
The question, as presented, is total nonsense since volume cannot be measured i cm. A centimetre is a measure of distance, not volume. The appropriate measure for volume is cubic centimetres or cc. Density = Mass/Volume = 36 g/12 cc = 3 grams per cc.
the density is 5.54g/cm3
Density is mass/volume. Therefore, if you know the mass and the volume, you just do the division: 37.27 g / 6.80 ml = 5.48 g/ml
You calculate density as mass / volume.
Since density = mass/volume, D = 25/10 = 2.5g/cm^3
density = mass/volume = 36 g / 12 cm3 = 3 grams per cm3
Density = 2.991 g/cm3
t45
0.0125
density = mass / volume = 72 g / 36 cm³ = 2 g/cm³
density = mass/volume = 1800g/300 cm³ = 6 g/cm³
The density will not be as large as one with the same mass which is spread over a smaller volume.
There can be no possible answer to this question. Volume cannot be measured in g. Mass cannot be measured in cm - nor can volume.