Water has a density of 1 that is (mass in kg/volume in m3=1) so mass in kg = volume in m3 2 x 3 x 1.5 = 3x3 = 9m3 which is 9kg
It is slightly higher than water, 1140 kg/m3
density = mass / volume density = 0.250 kg / (0.05 m)3 density = 0.250 kg / 0.000125 m3 density = 2000 kg/m3 (For comparison, pure water's density is about 1000 kg/m3)
Density (kg/m3) = mass(kg)/volume(m3)= 0.386/20x10-3 = 19.333333....kg/m3
You cannot. Cubic meters are unit of volume, and kilograms are a unit of mass. The only exception is if you are talking about figuring out how heavy something is by its volume. Then you need to find its density, which will be in mass units/volume units. Then you just need to figure out how many of those volume units you have in the volume of the object you are working with, and multiply the mass units by that to get its mass. However, you are able to convert m3 into kg for water quite simply. 1m3 of water = 1000kg of water
1000Kg/m3
Water has a density of 1 that is (mass in kg/volume in m3=1) so mass in kg = volume in m3 2 x 3 x 1.5 = 3x3 = 9m3 which is 9kg
At 4°C pure water has a density of 1000 kg/1 m3. 1 litre = 1000 cm3 3 litre = 3000 cm3 = 0.003 m3 Mass = Density x Volume = 1000 kg/1 m3 x 0.003 m3 = 3 kg
No, the mass on Mercury would not float on water. Mercury has a high gravitational pull, which means objects with mass would sink in water due to the greater force of gravity pulling them downward.
To calculate density, you divide the mass by the volume. In this case, the density would be 2.7 g/cm³ (135g / 50 cm³).
It is slightly higher than water, 1140 kg/m3
1 L water will have a greater mass than 1 L alcohol, as water is denser than alcohol.
density = mass / volume density = 0.250 kg / (0.05 m)3 density = 0.250 kg / 0.000125 m3 density = 2000 kg/m3 (For comparison, pure water's density is about 1000 kg/m3)
mass is conserved (total mass is the sum of the mass of the constituents) so 50 + 50 = 100g
To find the mass of 50 mL of water, you would multiply the volume of water (50 mL) by the density of water, which is about 1 gram per milliliter. Therefore, the mass of 50 mL of water would be approximately 50 grams.
The mass of water can be determined by multiplying the volume of water by its density. Given that the density of water is 1.0 grams per cubic cm, and the volume of water is 50 ml, the mass of the water would be 50 grams.
Density of water is 1000kg/m3. Also, Volume = Mass/Density = 1/1000 = 0.001m3. So, volume of water that has mass of 1 kg is 0.001m3.