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The density of the copper piece would be 5 g/cm^3. This is calculated by dividing the mass (50g) by the volume (10cm^3).
Volume cannot be 29.4 cm since that is a measure of a length, not volume. Assuming that you meant 29.4 cm3, the density is mass/volume = 25.0 g / 29.4 cm3 = 0.850 grams per cubic centimetre (to 3 dp).
The volume of gold displacing the water can be found using the density formula: density = mass/volume. Rearranging the formula to solve for volume, volume = mass/density. Plugging in the values given, volume = 100 grams / 19.3 grams per ml = 5.18 ml. So, the gold should displace 5.18 ml of water.
The density of the metal can be calculated by dividing the mass (25g) by the volume (10 cm^3). Therefore, the density of the metal is 2.5 g/cm^3.
Because d=M/V the answer is 1,45 g/cm3.
Iron pyrite (FeS2) has a density of 4.8 to 5.0 grams per cm3. A piece of volume 40 cm3 would, therefore have a mass of volume*density = 192 to 200 grams.
Weigh the piece of maple (you've indicated it is about 10 grams) Completely submerge it in a liquid and measure the volume of liquid displaced Density = mass/(volume displaced) or about 10g/(volume displaced)
The density of the copper piece would be 5 g/cm^3. This is calculated by dividing the mass (50g) by the volume (10cm^3).
25/29.4 = 0.85 grams/cm3
The density is 7.8 grams per cm^3.
The density of a piece of granite with a volume of 340 cm and mass of 918 g would be 1,400 grams. This is a math problem.
0.3 g/cm2
Density = Mass/Volume = 16/2.8 g/mL = 5.714 grams per mL (approx).
If the volume stay the same, i.e 256 cubic centimeters then the density will be 2.34g/cubic centremeter. However if the the volume changes because it is the same material then the density will be 1.17g/cubic centimeter as calculated by density= mass/volume
89.2g
It is 2.6 g/cm3.
The density of a metal can be measured by dividing its mass by its volume. The formula for density is density = mass/volume. This can be done by weighing the metal to find its mass and then calculating its volume using measurements such as length, width, and height.