Wiki User
∙ 9y agoYou can't - not enough information. Basically you need to divide the mass by the volume.
Wiki User
∙ 9y agoYou can't. Volume is the space occupied by a substance or object. To find the volume from the mass, the density would have to be known. Density = Mass / Volume If you want to find any of the three, you need the other two.
I don't believe there is a way to find the mass of an object knowing only the diameter of the object. If you had the volume, or some other measurements sure. the best bet would be just to weigh it, or find the volume using the principles of displacement.
The volume of anything is always the area of the base of the object times the height. Therefore, to find the volume the object must have a height, which makes volume work with all 3D shapes. If one is looking at a 2D shape, then there is no height so a volume cannot be calculated (note: areas may be found of 2D shapes).
You cannot. You can only find a ratio of two or more objects. Then, it can be the ratio of their size, volume, mass, monetary value, temperature - or any other characteristic that can be measured.
You cannot calculate the volume of an object using only the density; you must also calculate the mass.You can calculate the mass by simply weighing the object.Density = Mass / VolumeTherefore Volume = Mass/Density.If you cannot be bothered to calculate the mass, simply measure the object. Multiply the length, times the width, times the height and you have the volume.
You can't. Volume is the space occupied by a substance or object. To find the volume from the mass, the density would have to be known. Density = Mass / Volume If you want to find any of the three, you need the other two.
To find the mass of an object when the volume is known but not the density, you will need to multiply the volume of the object by the density. If the density is not known, you won't be able to determine the mass without additional information. Density is mass per unit volume, so without that value, the mass cannot be calculated with just volume information.
I don't believe there is a way to find the mass of an object knowing only the diameter of the object. If you had the volume, or some other measurements sure. the best bet would be just to weigh it, or find the volume using the principles of displacement.
A rectangle cannot have a volume. Only 3-dimensional objects (solids) can have volumes. A rectangle is a 2-dimensional object - or a plane figure.
density=mass/volume volume=mass/density
The volume of anything is always the area of the base of the object times the height. Therefore, to find the volume the object must have a height, which makes volume work with all 3D shapes. If one is looking at a 2D shape, then there is no height so a volume cannot be calculated (note: areas may be found of 2D shapes).
No.
To calculate density, you need both the mass and volume of an object. If only the mass is given (220g), you would need the volume of the object to calculate its density. Density is equal to mass divided by volume (density = mass/volume). So without the volume of the object, the density cannot be determined.
there are 2 ways that I know about: the first way is length x width x height. And the second way is the water displacement method by Archimedes.
width x height x depth If the object is truly a cube, then you only need one number ... the length of any edge of it. Cube that number (multiply 'S' times 'S' times 'S'), and you have the volume.
You can't. If I tell you there's an object here with a mass of 1 kilogram, you have no way to decide whether it's a bottle of water or a small roomful of air.
You cannot. You can only find a ratio of two or more objects. Then, it can be the ratio of their size, volume, mass, monetary value, temperature - or any other characteristic that can be measured.