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The formula of density is mass/volume. So mass divided by volume
The measurement unit for volume is not a centimetre and so the volume cannot be 5 cm and, in that respect, the question is flawed. If you meant 5 cubic centimetres, then the density is 10 grams per cubic centimetre.
Density is the Mass (weight) of a unit of Volume. In the Metric system it is usually stated as the number of GRAMS per CUBIC CENTIMETRE ( gm/cc) A cc is a cube of 'stuff' having a length, and a width, and a height of 1 centimetre. Pure WATER has a density of 1 gram/ cc . Steel density is approx. 8gram/cc A cc and a ml both occupy the same VOLUME . If you put a rock into a FULL container of water, then the overflow of water will be exactly the same as the Volume of the Rock. Measure the quantity of ml which overflowed, and that will be the cubic centimetre volume of that Rock. Now weigh the Rock and calculate its gram/cc Density
The measurement unit for volume is not a centimetre and so the volume cannot be W cm and, in that respect, the question is flawed. If you meant W cubic centimetres, then the density is 525/W grams per cubic centimetre.
The volume is 19,245 cm3.
Density = Mass/Volume = 3.68 grams per cubic centimetre.
The formula of density is mass/volume. So mass divided by volume
The measurement unit for volume is not a centimetre and so the volume cannot be 5 cm and, in that respect, the question is flawed. If you meant 5 cubic centimetres, then the density is 10 grams per cubic centimetre.
Density is the Mass (weight) of a unit of Volume. In the Metric system it is usually stated as the number of GRAMS per CUBIC CENTIMETRE ( gm/cc) A cc is a cube of 'stuff' having a length, and a width, and a height of 1 centimetre. Pure WATER has a density of 1 gram/ cc . Steel density is approx. 8gram/cc A cc and a ml both occupy the same VOLUME . If you put a rock into a FULL container of water, then the overflow of water will be exactly the same as the Volume of the Rock. Measure the quantity of ml which overflowed, and that will be the cubic centimetre volume of that Rock. Now weigh the Rock and calculate its gram/cc Density
The measurement unit for volume is not a centimetre and so the volume cannot be W cm and, in that respect, the question is flawed. If you meant W cubic centimetres, then the density is 525/W grams per cubic centimetre.
density = mass divided by volume = 100/25 = 4 grammes per cubic centimetre.
The density is 45/15 = 3 grammes per cubic centimetre.
Not exactly. Density is weight divided by volume.
It is 3.68 grams per cubic centimetre.
The volume is 19,245 cm3.
Not sure that anything has a volume of a cubic centremeter, since there is no such measure. Cubic centimetre, yes. Density = Mass/Volume = 27 g / 10 cc = 2.7 grams per centimetre.
Density = Mass/Volume = 84g / 21 cc = 4 grams per cubic centimetre.