The volume of lead will be greater than one gram of water. The density?æof lead is about 11 times more than that of water.?æ
because lead is more dense than water, i.e. the same volume of lead is heavier than the same volume of water, 1g of water has a greater volume
There are 1,000,000 micrograms in a gram. This is indiscriminant of what the material is. i.e. it could be gold, lead, water etc.
It depends on what the one gram is of 1g of lead is denser than 1g of oil (pretty sure because the oil would float on top of water and the lead block would sink)
100 grams of water takes up more space than an equal weight of lead. That is why lead does not float in water.
Yes, aluminum is approximately 2.7 times more dense than water
Either scratch it and see if it is plated or use Archimedes method.Find the volume of the objectFind the mass of the objectDivide the mass by the volume - if you use SI units you will get the specific gravity (density) directlyThe specific gravity of gold is greater than 19 (almost twice that of lead).
aluminium
You can't, because the gram isn't a volume. The volume of a gram depends on what substance you have a gram of. A gram of air has more volume than a gram of water, and a gram of stone, lead, or gold has a very, very tiny volume.
This depends on the mass.
Depends on the substance. A gram of lead will have a lot less than a ml of volume, while a gram of oxygen will have a greater volume than 1 ml. Water is 1 ml per gram, but that changes with the temperature of the water. Warm water, and very cold water (<4o C) will have a somewhat greater volume than 1 ml per gram weight.
water has less density than lead. Mass depends on its volume
It depends on if they are solid or liquid.
Lead (11,34 g.cm^-3) has a greater density than water (1 g.cm^-3) so for the same volume of water and lead, lead will be heavier. The "-3" should be written as an exponent but it won't allow me
the same
They both weigh the same: 1kg = 1kg. The kg of butter has a greater volume and the kg of lead has a higher density.
That depends on the amounts, of course - what exactly you are comparing. The buoyant force depends on the volume. For a certain volume of lead, there will be the same buoyant force as for the same volume of iron. On the other hand, since lead has a greater density, the buoyant force on a certain amount of MASS of lead will be less, compared to iron, since the same mass of lead will use up less volume.
lead and water will occupy the same volume. however the Density of lead is 207.2 g/L (grams per liter) and the Density of H2O is only 18.02 g/L so if you had the same volume of lead and water the lead would be heavier. But if you had the same Weight of both water and lead the water would have a larger volume.
It is not possible to answer the question since that depends on the density of the item. Consider 22 g of water and 22 g of lead. The lead will occupy much less volume because it has a much greater density.