2.5 cm x 3.5 cm x 1.5 cm = 13.125 cm^3
13.125 cm^3 x 1.74g/cm^3 = 22.8375 grams Mg
Volume cannot be measured in grams per cubic centimetres, density can.
Area of cylinder base = pi x Radius squared (πr2) Radius is in centimeters (cm) Area is in centimeters squared (cm2) ---- Volume = Area x Height Area is in centimeters squared (cm2) Height is in centimeters (cm) Volume is in centimeters cubed (cm3) ---- Mass = Volume x Density Density is in grams centimeter cubed (g/cm3) Volume is in centimeters cubed (cm3) Mass is in grams (g)
Density = Mass/Volume = 3.68 grams per cubic centimetre.
Density is measured in grams per cubic centimetre (or kg per m3); cubic centimetres, by themselves, are a measure of volume - not density. The density of water is 1 g/cm3
Density = mass(in grams)/volume ( volume in centimeters cubed. cc ) 9.6 kilograms = 9600 grams 15 cm^3 = 3375 cc Density = 9600 grams/3375 cc = 2.84 grams/cubic centimeters ( or milliliters) ( real density of iron is 7.86 g/ml )
Volume cannot be measured in grams per cubic centimetres, density can.
Magnesium
Density is mass times volume.If the mass is 56.5 and the volume is 32.5 then the density is about 1836.25.
You mean density?
Magnesium has the atomic number 12, barium has the atomic number 56. The density of magnesium is 1,78 g/cm3, the density of barium is 3,51 g/cm3.
Magnesium is not soft. Because of its density it is, however, the lightest structural metal.
Density: Mass/Volume Answer: 2.5
Depends on the density.
13.6 g/ cms3
It is greater than water. It sinks.
Magnesium
If they both have the same substance inside, then they both have the same density. If they don't both have the same substance inside, then we have to know what the substances are before we can figure out anything about the density of the cubes. Size has nothing to do with density.