No. It cannot be. Mass cannot be measured in cm3, which is a measure of volume.
density = mass ÷ volume= 20 g ÷ 12 cm3≈ 1.67 g/cm3
The density of the mass is 48 g/cm3
density = mass ÷ volume = 4 g ÷ 6 cm3 = 2/3 g/cm3
density = mass ÷ volume = 30 g ÷ 10 cm3 = 3 g/cm3
5.0 L = 5000 cm31 L = 1000 cm3
m = dV (d for density (even though greek letter rho should be used))therefore m = (1.0 g/cm3)(5 L)m = (1.0 g/cm3)(5 dm3) (since 1 L = 1 dm3)m = (1.0 g/cm3)(5000 cm3) (since 1 dm3 = 1000 cm3)m = 5000 gm = 5 kg2,000 cm³
No. It cannot be. Mass cannot be measured in cm3, which is a measure of volume.
The density of the substance can be calculated by dividing the mass (31 g) by the volume (68 cm3). So, density = mass/volume = 31 g / 68 cm3 β 0.46 g/cm3.
To find the density, divide the mass (53.5 g) by the volume (89.1 cm3). Density = mass / volume Density = 53.5 g / 89.1 cm3 = 0.601 g/cm3
density = mass ÷ volume= 20 g ÷ 12 cm3≈ 1.67 g/cm3
The density of the mass is 48 g/cm3
The mass of 1 cm3 of water is approximately 1 gram.
density = mass ÷ volume = 4 g ÷ 6 cm3 = 2/3 g/cm3
The density of aluminum is 2.70 g/cm3. To find the density of 100 cm3 of aluminum with a mass of 250g, divide the mass by the volume: 250g / 100 cm3 = 2.50 g/cm3. The density of the aluminum sample is 2.50 g/cm3.
An object with a mass of 579 g and volume of 30 cm3 will have a density of 19.3 g/cm3.
The density of this copper mass is about 8.93 g/cm3