Both the mass and weight remain unchanged. However; generally; the volume increases due to the thermal expansion of the substance when heated up.
titre value for a substance is the volume of titrant divided by the weight of the sample
I would do it the same way Archimedes did; Weigh the substance, then immerse it in a substance that would not affect it, i.e. water, alcohol, etc., to determine the volume of the sample of the substance, then divide the weight by the volume and reduce the result to grams/cubic centimetre, or whatever unit is convenient; g/cc kg/L tonne/hectolitre, etc., etc. OR: Measure the mass and volume of the substance, then divide the mass by the volume
This ratio is called the specific gravity.
A cubic meter is a unit of volume, not weight. You would also need to know the density of the substance. For example 0.0175 cubic meters of water will weigh much more than the same volume of air.
Using Archimedes principle we can find the density of such object. First let's weigh the body hanging in air using a physical balance. Let it be w1 Now immerse it in water kept in a beaker and weigh once again. Let it be w2. Now using the expression density can be found. Density = w1/ (w1 - w2)
This depends on the substance. Re-ask the question with the substance or density of the substance. Gallons -> volume Lbs -> weight Weight = volume X density
Density measures how compact a particular substance is. It can be calculated by adding the weight with the volume of the substance. To figure out the density of sugar you must first know the weight and volume and then plug them into the equation: density = weight + volume.
The density is measured by dividing the mass of the substance with it's volume. Density = Mass/Volume.
weight is different in different gavities but mass is not, volume is not involved
Specific gravity.
It completely depends on whether or not there is any substance in the volume, and whether the volume is anywhere near a planet.
This depends on the density of the substance. Liters: Volume Tonne: Weight Density = Weight / Volume Volume = Weight / Density
Density = Mass/Volume is a measure of the amount of matter in a unit volume of a substance. Weight is the effect of gravity acting on a mass.
It does not. It equals volume. The weight will vary depending on the substance occupying that volume.
weight, volume, density, mass
weight is different in different gavities but mass is not, volume is not involved
A cup is a measure of volume, and dry ounces is a weight, The only way one can determine the weight of a substance that will fit into a specific volume is to measure the specific substance.