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∙ 14y agoDensity is defined as the amount of matter (mass) per unit of volume of a specific substance, and is calculated by dividing the mass of any sample of the substance in question by its volume. Considering the unit of density as g/cm3 (grams per cubic centimeter or grams per cc), the density of the substance in your question is exactly 1.5 g/cm3.
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoDensity is calculated by dividing the mass of a substance by its volume. In this case, the density of the substance would be 1.5 grams divided by 1 cc, which equals 1.5 grams/cc.
Wiki User
∙ 14y ago1.5 g/cc or 1.5 g/ml.
Density = mass divided by volume.
= (1.5 g) / (1 cc)
Note: 1 cc = 1 ml (milliliter)
The mass of a 15 ml sample of mercury would be approximately 166.5 grams. Mercury has a density of 13.6 grams per milliliter, so by multiplying the volume (15 ml) by the density, you can calculate the mass.
The density of the substance is calculated by dividing its mass by its volume. In this case, the density would be 90 g / 15 ml = 6 g/ml.
The density of the object is 3 grams per milliliter (15 grams / 5 milliliters).
To find the density, divide the mass of the rock (15 grams) by its volume (30 milliliters). Density = mass/volume, so in this case 15 grams / 30 milliliters = 0.5 grams per milliliter. Therefore, the density of the rock is 0.5 g/mL.
The mass of a liquid of volume 5ml would depend on the density of the liquid. Pure water would have a mass of 5 grams/5ml at 4 degrees C. ; 5ml of mercury has a mass of approx 67.7 grams; 5ml of gasoline has a mass of approx 3.69 gms
The mass of the substance can be calculated by multiplying the volume (15 ml) by the density (0.75 g/ml). So, the mass of the substance would be 15 ml x 0.75 g/ml = 11.25 grams.
Density = Mass/Volume = 30/15 = 2 grams per millilitre.
The mass of a 15 ml sample of mercury would be approximately 166.5 grams. Mercury has a density of 13.6 grams per milliliter, so by multiplying the volume (15 ml) by the density, you can calculate the mass.
The density of the substance is calculated by dividing its mass by its volume. In this case, the density would be 90 g / 15 ml = 6 g/ml.
The density of the object is 3 grams per milliliter (15 grams / 5 milliliters).
To find the density, divide the mass of the rock (15 grams) by its volume (30 milliliters). Density = mass/volume, so in this case 15 grams / 30 milliliters = 0.5 grams per milliliter. Therefore, the density of the rock is 0.5 g/mL.
To calculate density, divide the mass of the material by its volume. In this case, the density would be 15 grams divided by 5 cm³, which equals 3 grams/cm³.
density = mass/volume density = 15/20 = 3/4 units/ml
The mass of a liquid of volume 5ml would depend on the density of the liquid. Pure water would have a mass of 5 grams/5ml at 4 degrees C. ; 5ml of mercury has a mass of approx 67.7 grams; 5ml of gasoline has a mass of approx 3.69 gms
If those 4.9 grams of mass fill 15.0 milliliters of space right now, this minute, then the density of the substance is 4.9/15 = 0.3267 grams per cm3 right now, this minute, regardless of the temperature. If the temperature changes, its volume will change, and so will its density.
Density = Mass/Volume = 6.05/18.0 = 0.336 grams per millilitre (not milliters!)
Density = Mass/ Volume = 15/5 = 3 grams per cm3