a 5 gram object that is 5 cm³ :)
Any fluid: oil, petrol, soft drinks, milk, beer.
1 fluid ounce of water weighs 1 ounce; so they are the same weight if you are talking about water. However, if you are measuring a liquid that has a density greater than that of water, then 1 fluid ounce of that liquid would weigh more than 1 ounce.
It depends on what information you have. If the liquid is stored in a container of which the dimensions are known, then you must calculate the volume of the container. You can simply search google for the formulae for the volume of a cube, cylinder, sphere etc. If the dimensions are not known, but the weight and density of the fluid is, then the volume can be calculated as: volume = weight (divided by) density
Ounces can't be converted to ml. Except with a few things that are "pint for pound" which means their density matches their volume.Fluid ounces can be converted however.1 US fluid ounce = 29.57 ml7 US fluid ounces = 207 ml
It could refer to density, where the mass is measured in milligrams and the volume in decilitres. Or It could refer to concentration in a fluid where the mass of the "active" substance is measured in milligrams and the volume of the solution (possibly solute) is measured in decilitres.
Objects whose density is lower than the density of the fluid they're in float. Objects whose density is higher than the density of the fluid they're in don't.
Any object will float if its density is less than the density of the fluid,and it'll sink if its density is greater than the density of the fluid.
An object will float if it has less density than the fluid in which it is placed; if the object has more density, it will sink.
a 5 gram object that is 5 cm3
If an object has less density than water (or whatever liquid you are considering), it will float. And if it has more density then the liguid you are considering it will sinq
An object would float on a fluid if the density of the object was less than the density of the fluid.
density of the object < density of the fluid
An object will float if it has less density than the fluid it is placed in.For example, in the specific case of water, some objects that will float on it is anything made from most woods and most plastics.
When you have the density of both the object and the fluid, just see which has a higher density. If the object has a higher density than the fluid, the object will sink. If the object has a lower density than the fluid, the object will float.
it will float providing it is in that fluidIt will float on the surface of the fluid.
Density has its connection with buoyancy.The ability of an object to "float" when it is placed in a fluid is called buoyant force. If an object is less dense than the fluid in which it is placed, it will "float" on the fluid. If it is more dense than the fluid, it will "sink." For example: Metal ships can float because their total density is less than that of the water that they float on.
Density has its connection with buoyancy.The ability of an object to "float" when it is placed in a fluid is called buoyant force. If an object is less dense than the fluid in which it is placed, it will "float" on the fluid. If it is more dense than the fluid, it will "sink." For example: Metal ships can float because their total density is less than that of the water that they float on.