The volume cannot be 3 cm since volume is a three dimensional measure.
density = mass/volume = 350/150 = 2.33 grams/cubic centimeter
Density = Mass/Volume = 50g/12.5mL = 4 g per mL
density = mass divided by volume = 100/25 = 4 grammes per cubic centimetre.
15g/cm^3
There can be no sensible answer to the question because the question provides no information on the units used. Consequently, there is no guarantee that the units for measuring volume are the same as the those used as the denominator for density. For example, if the volume is in cubic cm and the density is in grams per cubic cm, the calculated mass would be in grams. But with the same density, if the volume were litres, the mass would be kilograms. It gets even more complicated if the volume is in gallons!
Density simply means mass per unit of volume. So, 120 grams divided by 25 cc = 4.8 grams / cc (density).
density = mass/volume = 350/150 = 2.33 grams/cubic centimeter
Density = Mass/Volume = 25g/5ml = 5 grams per mL.
Density = Mass/Volume = 50g/12.5mL = 4 g per mL
3 grams /cm3
density = mass divided by volume = 100/25 = 4 grammes per cubic centimetre.
density = mass/volume → density = 84 g / 12 cc = 7 g/cc = 7 g/cm³ = 7 g/ml
1 mL = 1 cm3 Density = mass / volume Mass = 15 g Volume = 30 cm3 Density = .5 gcm-3 (grams per centimeter cubed)
The density of the rock is its mass divided by its volume (in suitable units). Since a millilitre is the same volume as a cubic centimetre, density = 127 grams / 32.1 cm3 = 3.956 g/cm3
density = mass/volume → The density of the rock is the mass of the rock divided by the difference in the volume from before the rock was dropped in and afterwards. Its units are grams/ml
15g/cm^3
35/7=5 grams per cc