Density has the units of mass over volume, therefore your question is posed incorrectly. I suspect you might have meant 550 cubic cm (or cc). Assuming this is the case, dimensional analysis tells you to divide the mass by the volume to get the density.
55 g / 550 cc = 0.1 g / ml
The density of the object is calculated by dividing the mass (550 g) by the volume it displaces (25 mL). However, since the units need to be consistent, 25 mL needs to be converted to cubic centimeters (cm3) since 1 mL is equal to 1 cm3. Thus, the density of the object is 22 g/cm3.
First of all, grams and kilograms are units of mass, not weight.To answer the question: 1 kilogram = 1,000 grams, so an objectwith a mass of 450 grams is 550 grams short of 1 kilogram.
There are approximately 167.64 meters in 550 feet.
550 yards is equivalent to 502.92 meters.
11 times 50 equals 550.
A block has a mass of 550 g and a volume of 650 cm 3 . What is the block's density, and will it sink or float in freshwater?
The conversion from grams (g) to milliliters (ml) depends on the density of the substance. However, for water, 550g is equal to 550 ml since their densities are essentially the same at room temperature.
Density is measured in kilograms per metre cubed, kgm-3, because a gram and a litre are both one thousnadths of their base unit, density can also be written as grams per litre. A density of 5 kgm-3 is the same as 5gl-1. A volume of 2.0 ml with a mass of 27.1 g would have a density of 27.1 grams per 0.002 litres, or 27.1/0.002 gl-1. which calculates as 13 550 gl-1, which is the same as 13 550 kgm-3.
The density of the object is calculated by dividing the mass (550 g) by the volume it displaces (25 mL). However, since the units need to be consistent, 25 mL needs to be converted to cubic centimeters (cm3) since 1 mL is equal to 1 cm3. Thus, the density of the object is 22 g/cm3.
You can use Calculus to figure it out, but that's a lot of work. A more simple approach is to: # mass it (in grams) # dunk it into a pitcher of water, and record how much liquid it displaces (in mL = cm^3) # take (1), divide (2) # if the number is less than 1 it floats, and if the number is greater than 1 it sinks Explanation: * Density is defined as mass/volume, so to figure out the density of an object, find it's mass and it's volume, and divide the two. * To mass something is kind of like weighing it, but with different units. If something weighs 1 pound it's mass might be about 450 grams, depending on where you are. * An easy home-approach to finding volume of ex. a rock would be to find how much liquid it displaces. Take a measuring beaker that measures mL and fill it with ex. 500 mL of water, then insert your rock. Let's say the water level rose to 550 mL, that means your rock's volume is 50 mL. 1 mL = 1 cm^3 * So lets say your rock weighed 150 grams (about 5 ounces), and the water moved up 50 cm^3, so the rock's mass is 150g/50cm^3 = 3 g/cm^3 * Water's density is about 1 g/cm^3, so this rock's density is about 3 times as much as water! (I guess we just proved why rocks don't float!)
A gallon IS a volume so the volume of 550 gallons is 550 gallons.
assuming water with density 1 gm/cc 550 cc = 550 gm
Calderdale's population density is 550 people per square kilometer.
The population density of Bredsand is 550 people per square kilometer.
The density of hydrated lime typically ranges from 550-640 kg/m³.
The population density of Oskar-Fredriksborg is 550 people per square kilometer.
About 550 pounds.