Density = Mass/Volume so Volume = Mass/Density = 80.0/0.70 = 114.3 cm3.
[object Object]
Volume of cube = 203 ie 800 cc Density = Mass/Volume = 16000/800 = 20 gm/cc
Well to get density you have to devide mass by volume: Density= Mass Volume Since you are given the mass and the density and you are looking for volume, simply fill in the bits of information you have into the equation above. 70= 50 Volume (take volume as X) Then cross multiply to get the volume: 70X=50 X=50/70 X= 0.714
Density = Mass /Volume = 800g / 2L = 400 g per L
Isn't it just 800 grams?
mass = density x volume. So with a small rearrangemet we can see that density = mass/volume this gives us: 2000g/800cm3 = 2.5gcm-3 in SI units we have to convert to Kg and Meters so that's 2Kg/8m3 = 0.25Kgm-3
800 cubic feet of water weights roughly 49,941.52 (water volume times density.)
4 kg/0.005m3 = 800 kg/m3
You cannot convert a volume measure to a mass without knowing the density (or specific gravity) of the substance in question. 800 cc of helium will have a much smaller mass than 800 cc of lead.
The density of gasoline is 800 kg.
None. A cubic value is a measure of volume while a ton is a measure of mass. The two measure different things and it makes no sense to try to convert from one to the other without additional information - in this case, density. For example, 800 tons of lead will occupy far less volume than 800 tons of water.
It depends on the density of the material being weighed. The weight of 800 cc of water is 800 grams or 1.764 pounds. The weight of 800 cc of milk is 870 grams or 1.9 pounds.