One cubic centimeter of gold has more mass than 2 cubic centimeters of copper.
Gold has a density of 19.3 grams per cubic centimeter, while copper has a density of 8.94 grams per cubic centimeter so, two cubic centimeters of copper has mass of 17.9 grams, which is less than 19.3 grams of gold.
density = mass / volume → volume = mass / density = 6000 g / 8.96 g/cm³ ≈ 670 cm³
The mass of the 1.2 cm gold cube is (19.32 x 1.2) = 23.184 g
193g
530
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density = mass ÷ volume = 890 g ÷ 100 cm³ = 8.9 g/cm³
You use the density of copper, which is 8.96 g/cm cubed. Therefore 50 cm cubed would weigh 50 x 8.96 g = 44.8 g.
density = mass/volume = 241 g / 27.7 cm³ ≈ 8.7 g/cm³
The density of pure copper is: 8.94 g/cm^3 The density of pure zinc is: 7.13 g/cm^3
If a bar of copper has a mass of 216g and a volume of 24 cm3 then its density is 9 g/cm.
density = mass / volume → volume = mass / density = 6000 g / 8.96 g/cm³ ≈ 670 cm³
Density= Mass/Volume 1800g/110 cm^3 = 16.36 g/cm^3 No, it is not pure gold.
The mass of the 1.2 cm gold cube is (19.32 x 1.2) = 23.184 g
1cm3 of gold is heavier than 1cm3 of cotton. This is because gold is much more dense than cotton; though the cotton and gold both take up 1cm3, the gold is much more dense, and therefore has a higher mass than the cotton.
because it has a higher mass per volume or g/cm cubed
5.00 cm is a length measurement, not a mass measurement. You need to know the mass and volume of an object to find density. Density = mass/volume.
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