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No. Mass and volume are two completely different properties.
no, different things being measured
Because the same amount of gas will always weigh the same while the volume will vary with pressure.
Its capacity or volume - measured in the same units.Its capacity or volume - measured in the same units.Its capacity or volume - measured in the same units.Its capacity or volume - measured in the same units.
The mass = its volume. This is true if the mass of water is measured in grams and the volume is measured in cc and the density of water is 1 gram/cc. Depending on temperature, 1 gram/cc is a good approximation. In general, the relationship between water (or anything else) and its volume is mass/volume = density.
No they are not because volume is the amount of space, measured in cubic units, that an object or substance occupies and mass is a body of matter; considerable portion.
Density is measured and expressed as the mass to volume ratio. To determine what the density of a substance you measure its mass and divide that number by its measured volume (or you can look up the density based on what composes it). Then, using the same units, do the same for another substance. The substance with the larger number is more dense, has more mass per volume, than the substance with the lower number, and the same in reverse with respect to less density.
No. Mass is independent of shape. The mass, as measured by weight, will be the same. If the material is compressible and you change the volume as a result of changing the shape, the density will change although the mass will not.
Any volume of non-vacuum anything has mass. Any mass has volume. Both mass and volume have an 'm' in the word. Other than that, they are not at all the same thing.
Mass is normally measured in Kg (kilograms). A litre is a measurement of volume. However, there is of course a relationship between the two. For example, given the exact same conditions (same density) one litre of water will have the same mass as another.
The density (d) to be determined can be calculated by the formula: d = mass / volume , both measured from the same amount of matter.
yes! liquid has definite volume but not a definite shape..