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The object's density is 5 g/mL
The density of the object can be calculated by dividing the mass by the volume. In this case, the density would be 5 g/ 10 ml = 0.5 g/ml.
The density of the object can be calculated using the formula: Density = Mass/Volume. Plugging in the values, Density = 30 grams / 10 cm^3 = 3 grams/cm^3. Therefore, the density of the object is 3 grams/cm^3.
Density = Mass divided by Volume. 39.943 divided by 22.7 = about 1.76.
Density = mass / volume. If you mean 4 _cubic_ centimetres, the density is 11.3 grams per cubic centimetre. This is the density of lead.
The density of the object is 10 g/cm3. Density is calculated by dividing the mass of an object by its volume. In this case, 50g / 5 cm3 = 10 g/cm3.
The object's density is 10 g/cm3
The density of the object is 10 g/cm³. It is calculated by dividing the mass (50g) by the volume (5 cm³).
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density = mass/volume density = 5/10 = 0.5 grams per cubic centimeter
3 g/10 cm3 = 0.3 g/cm3 and this is the density, since density is expressed as mass/volume.
The density of the object is 5 g/mL
density = mass ÷ volume = 30 g ÷ 10 cm3 = 3 g/cm3
Since density = mass/volume, D = 25/10 = 2.5g/cm^3
The object with the mass of 50g has the greatest density because density is mass divided by volume, and since volume is the same for both objects (since they are the same size), the object with the greater mass will have the greater density.
The density of the object is 3 g/ml. Density is calculated by dividing the mass of an object by its volume. In this case, 30g divided by 10ml equals 3 g/ml.
Not necessarily, it would depend on the density of the object. Density = mass / volume. So, you could have something like this. Density of A = 10 g/mL, volume of A = 1 mL. Density of B = 1 g/mL, volume = 5mL. The volume of A < B, however, the mass of A > B.