There is no point in giving the volume as 1.1 - without any units. Is it meant to be 1.1 cm3 or 1.1 litres or 1.1 gallons or what?
Because I know the answer, I can work out that if it is a solid object (hot hollow), the volume must be 1.1 cm3 and then the density is 9.8/1.1 gm per cm3 = 8.91 gm per cm3.
You need to multiply the volume, by the density of copper.
Density = Mass/Volume = 60.9/6.8 = 8.96 grams per cm3
density = mass/volume density = 5/10 = 0.5 grams per cubic centimeter
Density = mass/volume, so:36 grams/ 12 milliliters3 grams/ milliliter
density = mass / volume → volume = mass / density = 6000 g / 8.96 g/cm³ ≈ 670 cm³
The density of copper is 8.94 grams per cm3. The mass will depend on the volume of the "lump" of copper.
You need to multiply the volume, by the density of copper.
89.2g
Density = Mass/Volume = 60.9/6.8 = 8.96 grams per cm3
Density = Mass/Volume so Volume = Mass/Density. Having said that, density is not measured in grams so it cannot be 0.789 grams. As a result, the question cannot be answered.
Depends on the volume. Density is mass divided by volume.
the mass is the 50 grams you probably need the volume volume = mass / density get the density from tables
Density = Mass/Volume. You cannot calculate density without knowing BOTH mass and volume.
The density of this copper mass is about 8.93 g/cm3
density = mass/volume density = 5/10 = 0.5 grams per cubic centimeter
Density = mass/volume, so:36 grams/ 12 milliliters3 grams/ milliliter
the pice of wood has a mass of 18 grams calculate it volume and density