density = mass divided by volume
density = 20/10 = 2 g/cm3
Use a fine balance.
A square does not have volume because it has no depth. A cube has volume. The formula to find the volume of a cube is length x width x height. Because all sides are equal in a cube, you can also cube the length of one side.Imagine a cube whose sides are all 2cm.Volume = 2cm x 2cm x 2cm = 8cm3orVolume = (2cm)3 = 8cm3.
Put the object in a measuring container; pour in water to cover the object and measure the volume in the container; take the object out of container and measure the volume remaining. The difference is the volume of the object. If the object floats push it down until covered with water.
Put it in a container of water. The amount of water it displaces (or the amount the water level rises) is exactly equal to the volume. Behold: you're Archimedes.answ2. For awkward materials such as pumice and sugar cubes, a suitable fluid is a fine granular material such as flour or Lycopodium powder.
Inches or centimetres are fine for a book's dimensions. Measure the width, height and depth to determine the volume. If you are talking about the length of the book's narrative, word count is probably the most accurate.
I do not know but you can divide mass by volume and get the density. --------------------------------------------- The density of a pure salt crystal is 2,165 g/cm3. This is a true density. The density of fine powdered salt (apparent density) is variable: approx. 1 g/cm3.
Water displacement method will work fine with molecules that do not dissolve... Here you have something that will dissolve in water, changing it's density. What I would do is to weight a graduated container, put some sugar (more you add, more precise will be the result) in the container... Better weight the container before... Weight the container after. Now you know the *weight* part of the answer, then you melt it, in that container... you read the *volume* part of the answer. put the part together to have a density which is mass/volume g/cm³ for example, or g/mL, which is the same.
Yes, that is correct. Density is a measure of how much mass is contained in a given volume of a substance. By dividing the mass by the volume of the substance, you can calculate its density. Density is often expressed in units like grams per cubic centimeter or kilograms per liter.
A very fine stone that light can be seen through is a alabaster. Alabaster is a quarried stone. It is white in color and translucent.
4.2 ----------------------------------------------------- The US teaspoon as a unit of volume has approx. 5 mL. After "Bulk density chart" the density of fine table salt is 1,378 g/cm3. So the mass of table salt in a teaspoon is 6,8 g.
mike stone
bulking of fine aggregate increases its volume. hence the mass for a given volume is less, which leads to richer mix than required. therefore batching of fine aggregate must be done by weight and not by volume.
The density of a 100-kg iron block will be the same as the density of an iron filing. Density is a property of a material that remains constant regardless of the amount of the material present. Density is calculated as mass divided by volume.
You can look for hair products that give volume to the hair, or you can tease it!!
The density of a pure salt crystal is 2,165 g/cm3. This is a true density. The density of fine powdered salt (apparent density) is variable: approx. 1 g/cm3.
No it is fine.
You cannot convert weight to volume. Measure out a pound of sodium bicarbonate instead.