No, 1500mL is a unit of volume, whereas 5g is a unit of mass. They are not directly comparable as they measure different properties.
Any amount of gold is more dense than any amount of diamond. They don't even have to be the same amounts. Density is a characteristic of the substance. No matter whether you have a microscopic speck of it or a truckload of it, the density is the same.
If the bracelet is 15g gold and 5g silver, then the gold content is 15/20 or 75%. Pure gold is 24 carat, so 75% is 18 carat.
d=m/v d=(25g)/(5cm3 ) d=5g/cm3
No. 500mg = 0.5g ; 5g = 5000 mg
yes
5 grams of liquid gold Other than water, the solid state of a substance sinks into its liquid state, because the liquid state is less dense than the solid state. The solid 5 gram sample of gold would have a lower volume, giving it a higher density. The liquid sample of 5 grams of gold would have a greater volume and a lower density.
The same way you determine the density of any other object. Divide the mass by the volume. Add: density = mass/volume = 5g/1mL = 5g/mL = 5g/cm3* *1mL = 1 cm3
5g/cm3
60g/12.0cm3=5g/cm3
20000 cm3
5000.0000
grams are weight, while teaspoons are volume. A teaspoon is 4.93 milliliters.
I took the liberty of changing the density to 5g/cm3 since 5g would be a mass quantity, and the volume to 10cm3, since 10cm would be a length quantity. density = mass/volume mass = density x volume = 5g/cm3 x 10cm3 = 50g
No, 1500mL is a unit of volume, whereas 5g is a unit of mass. They are not directly comparable as they measure different properties.
5g/cm3
5g/cm3