No.
Normally bigger means having more volume!
Yes. A good example would be styrofoam and steel. The same volume of each of these substances would make for vastly different weights.
1 quart is the same volume as 4 cups. That's bigger than 1 cup.
They would have to have the same base area, if that's what you mean.
they share the same volume. In the Metric system, Liters are a measurement of volume, not of weight. Therefore, 10 Liters of water would share the same volume as 10 Liters of Mercury.
There is no reason for the surface area to remain the same even if the volume is the same.
Yes. A good example would be styrofoam and steel. The same volume of each of these substances would make for vastly different weights.
They are the same volume
They are the same cup volume, however the 34B has a bigger band then the 32C.
No. They're the same volume.
if the styrofoam bag was really big, the foam would have a large mass. if the stones were in a tiny bag, they'd have a smaller mass. if you mean, the same sized bags, then no, the stones are much denser, so they'd always have more mass per equal volume than foam would.
1 quart is the same volume as 4 cups. That's bigger than 1 cup.
No, they do not.
mass is sort of like the measure of an objects volume, and has no set number per substance, but density is a fixed figure. As to which object is denser, it depends what type of metal you are talking about, but most of the time metal would be more dense. As to how much mass they have, it depends how big the piece of Styrofoam is, and what type and how big the metal is.
Absolutely.Volume of a cube is length times width times height.If you have a block of Styrofoam that is 2 feet wide, 2 feet tall and 2 feet long, it's 8 cubic feet in volume.It would probably weigh less than ten pounds (mass), however.If a block of the same size was made of iron, it would have the same volume, but would likely weigh hundreds, if not thousands of pounds (mass).
Not if the original form included air. Styrofoam (packing material) will shrink to a simply amazing degree. Dense plastics will result in exactly the same volume, but if formed into a beverage container, then obviously, the air in the container won't stick around.
Because styrofoam is made from the same oil base as gasoline, and has large air pockets.
all three.