13/5 = 2.6 g per cm3
69 cubic centimeters squared
The density of a substance is calculated by dividing its mass by its volume. In this case, the mass of the quartz is 13g and its volume is 5cm³. Therefore, the density of the quartz can be calculated as 13g / 5cm³ = 2.6 g/cm³.
Density = Mass/Volume = 25.0/28.7 = 0.871 units of mass per units of volume.
Density = Mass/Volume so Volume = Mass/Density. That is, Vol = 1.5 g/2.3 g/ml = 0.652 ml approx.
Volume = mass/volume = 500g/10cm3 = 50g/cm3
69 cubic centimeters squared
The density of a substance is calculated by dividing its mass by its volume. In this case, the mass of the quartz is 13g and its volume is 5cm³. Therefore, the density of the quartz can be calculated as 13g / 5cm³ = 2.6 g/cm³.
It is 2.6 g/cm3.
The density will be lower.
-- Get a pure piece of it. The size of the piece doesn't matter. -- Measure the mass of the piece. -- Measure the volume of the piece. -- The density of the substance is mass of the piece/volume of the piece.
You can tell the difference in density between quartz and galena by measuring their mass and volume. Calculate the density by dividing the mass by the volume. Galena has a higher density than quartz, so the sample with higher density is likely to be galena.
Based on what information? In general, density is defined as mass per unit volume, so if you measure the mass and the volume, you can divide mass by volume.
The density of the lead chess piece can be calculated by dividing its mass (51.4 g) by its volume (55 ml). Density = mass/volume. Therefore, the density of the lead chess piece is approximately 0.935 g/ml.
you can get the volume by using the density formula, since density of silver is a constant and given thing. density= mass/volume volume=mass/density.
Density = Mass/Volume = 25.0/28.7 = 0.871 units of mass per units of volume.
The density of silver is 10490 kg/m3. You need to have a piece of silver for it to have a mass or volume.
If you don't have the volume, you cannot directly convert density into mass. The formula for density (density = mass / volume) requires both mass and volume to calculate. You will need either the volume or another piece of information to determine the mass.