The density of tin is approximately 7.3 grams per milliliter.
The mass of 50 cm3 of water is 50 grams. This is because water has a density of 1 g/cm3, so for every 1 cm3 of water, the mass is 1 gram.
In order to determine the mass of the water sample, you would need to know the density of water. The density of water is approximately 1 g/cm3. Therefore, the mass of a 20 cm3 sample of water would be 20 grams (20 cm3 * 1 g/cm3 = 20 grams).
The mass of tin is approximately 118.71 atomic mass units.
First, convert the density from grams per cm3 to kilograms per cm3 (0.768 grams/cm3 = 0.000768 kg/cm3). Then, convert the volume of fuel from liters to cm3 (1 L = 1000 cm3). Finally, multiply the density by the volume to find the mass of the fuel in kilograms (155211 L * 1000 cm3/L * 0.000768 kg/cm3 = 119.25 kg).
0.136 cm3 for white tin to 0.173 cm3 for gray tin.
To find the density of copper and tin, we need to calculate the mass and volume of each metal in both alloys. Once we have those values, we can then determine the density by dividing the mass by the volume. For the first alloy with 8 cm3 of copper, we find the density of copper to be 9.5 g/cm3 and for tin, it is 7.75 g/cm3. Similarly, for the second alloy with 9 cm3 of copper, the density of copper is 17.56 g/cm3, and for tin, it is 14.36 g/cm3.
The mass of 1 cm3 of water is approximately 1 gram.
The density of tin is approximately 7.3 grams per milliliter.
The mass of 50 cm3 of water is 50 grams. This is because water has a density of 1 g/cm3, so for every 1 cm3 of water, the mass is 1 gram.
No
The density of the metal cube is 0.6 g/cm3. Density is calculated by dividing the mass (0.6g) by the volume (1 cm3).
1 cm3 of water weighs 1 gram. The volume is...ermm... 1 cm3
180 grams of white tin has a volume of 24.4 cm3, while 180 grams of grey tin has a volume of 32.2 cm3.
Density of Mountain Dew- 1.02 g/cm3 (volume=380 ml (1 ml= 1 cm3), mass=389 g.) Density of Diet Mountain Dew- 1 g/cm3 (volume=380 ml (1 ml= 1 cm3), mass=380 g.)
The volume is (6 x 3 x 1) = 18 cm3 . The density is (whatever amount of mass is contained in 1 cm3 ) per cm3 , or (1/18 of the mass of the total solid you described) per cm3 .
In order to determine the mass of the water sample, you would need to know the density of water. The density of water is approximately 1 g/cm3. Therefore, the mass of a 20 cm3 sample of water would be 20 grams (20 cm3 * 1 g/cm3 = 20 grams).