463.2 grams.
Gold.Explanation: Gold has a higher density than water.This means, the value of Mass/volume for gold is more than that of water.Here, the volume is same for both the substances. Then, for the density to vary, the mass should vary because volume is the same. As gold as a higher density, it has more mass than water for the same volume of the substance.
2.56
19.3
You mean a volume of 30 ml and mass of 579 g. Its s density = mass/volume = 579/30 = 19.3 g/ml which is very heavy. It could be several choices, but GOLD is that density...
Density = Mass / Volume Rearranging this gives: Volume = Mass / Density Mass = Density × Volume
what is the density of a brick with a volume of 0.0010m and a mass of 1.9kg
You use the density of copper, which is 8.96 g/cm cubed. Therefore 50 cm cubed would weigh 50 x 8.96 g = 44.8 g.
Density is defined as mass divided by volume, therefore: 100g/25cm3 = 4 g/cm3
To answer this question, you need to know the density of gold, which is 19.30g/cm3. The formula for density is: Density = mass/volume The given volume of gold is 1cm3. *1cc = 1cm3. Manipulate the density formula to find mass: mass = density x volume = 19.30g/cm3 x 1cm3 = 19.30g of gold
no; they have the same volume but their mass is quite different; density is mass/volume and the sponge has much lower density
19.3
gold is larger because of its density
Bite it...well you could find the density of it by this equation density=mass/volume and compare it to the density of gold on the periodic table
5.00 cm is a length measurement, not a mass measurement. You need to know the mass and volume of an object to find density. Density = mass/volume.
To test if something is pure gold, you will need to find out the density. The density of pure gold is 19.3 g/mL. To find the density, u will need to find out the mass and volume of the object then divide the mass by the volume ( m/V ). If your answer is not 19.3 then it is not pure gold.
Density = Mass/Volume = 150g / 50cm3 = 150/50 g per cm3 = 3 g per cm3
That depends on the amount of gold. The general relationship is: mass = volume x density In the case of gold, the density is approximately 19 kilograms per liter. Well, that's the mass, but people often refer to the mass when they say "weigh".