67.3 metres is a measure of distance and cannot be a measure of volume - as claimed in the question. There is, therefore, insufficient information to answer the question.
Density = Mass Density = 100g/50 cm. Density = 2g/cm3---------Volume.
density = mass/volume = 100g/50mL = 2g/mL
A cup is a unit of volume, but a gram is a unit of mass. You can convert mass to volume by dividing by the substance's density (density is mass/volume), but you cannot know the volume of 100 grams of a substance without directly measuring it or knowing the density. Which is about as much use as a chocolate teapot. Well done whoever wrote this they listened in science.
Density is defined as mass divided by volume, therefore: 100g/25cm3 = 4 g/cm3
The number of milliliters in 100g of powder depends on the density of the powder. To convert grams to milliliters, you need to know the density of the powder in grams per milliliter. Then you can divide the mass (100g) by the density to get the volume in milliliters.
100g of lead would occupy a larger volume compared to 100g of water because lead has a higher density of 11.34 g/ml, whereas water has a density of 0.995 g/ml. The higher the density of a substance, the more mass it can hold in a smaller volume.
Density = Mass Density = 100g/50 cm. Density = 2g/cm3---------Volume.
The density of the object is calculated by dividing the mass (100g) by the volume (25cm3). Therefore, the density would be 4 g/cm3.
100g of water is equal to 100g of ice in terms of weight, since they both have the same mass. However, the volume of the ice may be slightly larger due to the lower density of ice compared to water.
The idea is to divide the mass by the volume.
The volume of air with a mass of 100g would depend on the density of the air. The density of air at room temperature and pressure is approximately 1.2 kg/m^3. Using the formula density = mass/volume, you can calculate that the volume of 100g of air would be approximately 0.083 m^3.
density = mass/volume = 100g/50mL = 2g/mL
Well, honey, 100g of gold has a greater volume than 100g of water. Gold is denser than water, so even though they weigh the same, gold takes up less space. It's like comparing a compact car to a big ol' SUV - same weight, different sizes. Hope that clears things up for ya!
10 grams/ cc. That is 10 times more dense than water.
The density of mercury is approximately 13.6 g/cm³. To find the volume, you would divide the mass by the density: 100g / 13.6 g/cm³ = 7.35 cm³. Therefore, 100g of mercury would have a volume of 7.35 cm³.
Density = 4 g/mL
just give me the answer