It can, although it is a measure of the mass per unit volume of a given substance or object.
The answer depends on what you were trying to predict.
Density = Mass/Volume Volume of cube=5cmx5cmx5cm=125cm3 So 30g/125cm3=0.24g/cm3
equal the density of any other piece, assuming that the original cube was made of the same uniform substance.
The object's density is: about 0.1428 g/cm3
Density = mass/volume = 4g/8cm3 = 0.5g/cm3
Scales to measure its mass and a ruler to measure the length of the cube's side.
To measure density
You measure its mass and volume and then density = mass/volume.
The simplest procedure is find the mass of the cube using a simple balance. Preciously measure the size hence volume of the cube. Then Density=Mass/Volume and unit is gm/cc
This question cannot be answered without knowing the mass of the cube. Also, the volume of the cube cannot be 8 cm which is a linear measure.
If the mass of the cube is 96 g, what is the density of the cube material?
The answer depends on what characteristic you wish to measure: it volume, total surface area, largest diagonal, mass, colour, temperature, density, ...
No. Each piece of the cube would have the same density.
The density is (32)/(the length of each edge of the cube)3
Multiply the volume of the cube by its density.
Density cannot be measure in g. Consequently, the question does make sense. If the density is 21.45 gcm-3, then the volume is Mass/Density = 100/21.45 = 4.6620 cm3. Then the length of the cube's sides are (4.6620)1/3 cm = 1.671 cm.
You would need a balance to measure its mass. You would need a ruler to measure the length of its sides. Then you would need to calculate volume. Then divide the mass by the volume to get density.