About that of water.
This is true of most living things.
Interesting question. Put the grape in water and I believe you will see it floats. It is lighter than water. Now, put a paper clip in water and you will see it sinks. So the paper clip must have a density greater than water. It has a higher density. The weight of the object does not matter. Density is weight divided by volume. You may also be wondering why some fruits float and others sink in water. Fruits contain water and sugar. This alone would make them slightly heavier than fresh tap water. However, in the skin of fruit, there are openings that contain air. Even a little air can compensate for the extra weight of the sugar. There is a second way to answer your question, you can look up the densities of aluminum (what a paper clip is made of) and water (which is approximately the density of the grape). Just enter aluminum and density into Google, and you will find the density of aluminum much higher than water (density ~ 1 gm/cc).
A small grape would be 1 cm long.
washing up liquid, Orange Juice, Grape Juice
The density of golfball is less then density of water
Density
The mass of a grape is 7.5. The density of a grape is 2.5. The volume of a grape is 3. As you can see, there is a relationship between these three numbers that all mass, densities, and volumes of objects have.
no
To find the density of a grape, you must fill a graduated cylinder to exactly 200 mililiters. Then drop the grape in, wait till the water settles. Then subtract the new water level from 200 milliliters and then you have your answer.
the density
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Dose_a_raisin_have_the_same_density_of_a_grape Yes. density = mass per unit volume d= m/V
My favorite way is to bite into it and measure the amount of energy used to chew it. Then compare that to the amount of energy to chew something of a known density. I'm pretty good at figuring out how much more or less it's density is. But it is much better for the grape to have the water displacement test don't you think?
Interesting question. Put the grape in water and I believe you will see it floats. It is lighter than water. Now, put a paper clip in water and you will see it sinks. So the paper clip must have a density greater than water. It has a higher density. The weight of the object does not matter. Density is weight divided by volume. You may also be wondering why some fruits float and others sink in water. Fruits contain water and sugar. This alone would make them slightly heavier than fresh tap water. However, in the skin of fruit, there are openings that contain air. Even a little air can compensate for the extra weight of the sugar. There is a second way to answer your question, you can look up the densities of aluminum (what a paper clip is made of) and water (which is approximately the density of the grape). Just enter aluminum and density into Google, and you will find the density of aluminum much higher than water (density ~ 1 gm/cc).
grape, its fruit
Red-Purple: -------------- Purple rhubarb Passionfruit Acai Berry Unripe olive Cherokee purple tomato Hardy Fig Jotsaberry Loganberry Purple pomegranate Milkfruit Beautyberry Aubergine Canadice grape Vanessa grape Einset grape Catawba grape Delaware grape Cowart grape plum Black-Purple: -------------------- Eggplant Blackcurrent Blackberry Boisenberry Maqui berry Black velvet gooseberry Dewberry Bokbunja Black raspberry Black grapes Mulberry Belladonna berry Black beauty grape Muscadine grape Blue-Purple: ----------------- Huckleberry Sloe plum Damson plum Bullace plum Beach plum Blueberry Beautyberry Nannyberry Concord grape Alden grape Autumn royal grape Bluebell grape Buffalo grape Coronation grape Fantasy seedless grape Jupiter grape Black marroo grape Mars grape Niabell grape Ribier grape Steuben grape Van buren grape Mustang grape Muscat hamburg grape Pinot grape Green-Purple: ----------------------- Tomatillo Over-ripe avacado
No, a grape is the fruit of a grape vine, not a root.
There was a grape under the table. The grape was rotten.
a grape seed :D