Density = Mass/ Volume = 15/5 = 3 grams per cm3
The idea is to divide the mass by the volume.
Yes. You can find the density of a meterial if you have the mass and volume. You can use the formula D=mass/volume. The units for mass is grams and the units for volume are cm^3
density = mass/volume density = 5/10 = 0.5 grams per cubic centimeter
What would be the density of an object that has a volume of 25 cm3 and 5 grams?
Density = mass/volume, so:36 grams/ 12 milliliters3 grams/ milliliter
To get the density, just divide the mass by the volume.
180 / 45 = 4 grams per cc
Density is 2 g/cm3
density = mass/volume = 2g/40cm3 = 0.05g/cm3
If the volume stay the same, i.e 256 cubic centimeters then the density will be 2.34g/cubic centremeter. However if the the volume changes because it is the same material then the density will be 1.17g/cubic centimeter as calculated by density= mass/volume
Because water has a density of 1g/cm3, so there is a one to one ratio of mass to volume, so for example, so if a sample of water has a mass of 50 grams, its volume would be 50cm3 (mL).
The density of a material does not change with mass. 100 grams of a material will occupy 10 times the volume of 10 grams of the same material.
It depends on the density of the material being measured. Grams measure mass while teaspoons measure volume. You can use density to convert between them since [density = mass / volume].
Density = Mass/Volume = 200 g / 5 cm3 = 40 gcm-3
The idea is to divide the mass by the volume.
Yes. You can find the density of a meterial if you have the mass and volume. You can use the formula D=mass/volume. The units for mass is grams and the units for volume are cm^3
The formula for density is mass/volume, hence the density is 15/5=3g/cm3