-4.75
The density of silver is 10490 kg/m3. You need to have a piece of silver for it to have a mass or volume.
In this case, you need to divide the volume by the density.
Volume = Mass/Density = 45.6/10.5 = 4.34 millilitres.
Density is not measured in grams so nothing can have a density of 10.49 g. Assuming that the intended density is 10.49 g/cm3 then mass = density*volume = 10.49*12.99 = 136.27 grams, approx.
Density = Mass / Volume Rearranging this gives: Volume = Mass / Density Mass = Density × Volume
10.5 grams per cubic cm
The density of silver is 10490 kg/m3. You need to have a piece of silver for it to have a mass or volume.
The idea is to divice the mass by the volume, to get the density. Then compare to the density of silver.The idea is to divice the mass by the volume, to get the density. Then compare to the density of silver.The idea is to divice the mass by the volume, to get the density. Then compare to the density of silver.The idea is to divice the mass by the volume, to get the density. Then compare to the density of silver.
you can get the volume by using the density formula, since density of silver is a constant and given thing. density= mass/volume volume=mass/density.
525/50 = 10.5 g/cm3
You can determine if a coin is not pure silver by calculating its density using the formula density = mass/volume. Compare this calculated density to the known density of pure silver (10.5 g/cm3). If the calculated density does not match the density of pure silver, then the coin is not pure silver.
In this case, you need to divide the volume by the density.
Copper has more mass than silver. Copper has a density of about 8.96 grams per cubic centimeter, while silver has a density of about 10.49 grams per cubic centimeter.
Divide the mass by the volume to calculate its density. If its density isn't the same as an equal amount of pure silver, the coin has some other metal in it.The density test can be fooled if the coin was adulterated with other metals that average out to the same density as silver, however.
The density of silver is 10.49 grams per cubic centimeter. To find the volume needed to contain 21 grams of silver, divide the mass by the density: 21 grams / 10.49 g/cm^3 ≈ 2 cubic centimeters.
The mass of 1 cm3 of silver is approximately 10.5 grams. Silver has a density of 10.5 g/cm3, so for every cubic centimeter of silver, the mass is 10.5 grams.
A scale and a graduated cylinder can be used to measure the mass and volume of the silver ore, respectively. By dividing the mass by the volume, you can calculate the density of the silver ore.