Black holes are even denser than electrons and electrons are much denser than many objects to occupy the same spaces and this is how we increase the density for the same substances physically but not when we apply heat or be removing heat!
Yes. Density is simply a ratio of mass divided by volume, that means the density of something depends on its mass (how much it weighs) and how much space it occupies (how big it is). It is entirely possible for a solid to have this same density as a liquid.
Yes. Density equals mass divided by volume. If one substance is 2 grams and takes up 2 mL and another substance is 3 grams and 3 mL, they will still have the same density.
2 g/2mL = 1
3 g/3mL = 1
Of course.
-- A small piece of cake and a large piece of the same cake.
-- A small pine splinter and a large pine board.
-- A short piece of steel tube and a 4-ft steel plate in a ship's hull.
-- A drop of gasoline on the ground and 15 gallons of gasoline in the tank of your car.
-- A glass of milk and a gallon jug of milk in the fridge.
Both members of each pair have the same density.
-- Anything that floats just exactly under the surface of the water but doesn't move
up or down has the same density as water ... and a teaspoonful of that water has
the same density as a super-tanker-full of it.
Yes, it is possible for two different substances to have the same density. Milk and sea water, for example, have the same density.
Yes. Density is a property of substances, not a property of objects.
Same density, yes. But the weight or mass may vary.
yes, these are called isotopes
No
This is a mixture.
the volume could be different that could lead to the same density. For example: d=m/v so you would have a mass of 10 for compound A and a mass of 5 for compound B, and the volume of compound A is 2 and the volume of compound B has a volume of 1. Therefore both densities equal 5.
I would expect it to have more or less the same density, since it is made of the same material.
It will be having different temperature, but same thermal energy and same temperature, but different thermal energy
No. Two objects could have the same density but they also could not. If the two objects were not made from the same substance they would not have the same density. Although if they did then they would have the same density.
Different objects have the same density if they're made of the same substance.Density is a property of the substance, not the object.
Well if they are made of the same materials then the density should be a constant or "the same."
Well if they are made of the same materials then the density should be a constant or "the same."
It has no effect. Only mass and volume have an effect on density.
No. Solids made of different substances will normally have different densities.
Two objects has got same mass means the mass of both the objects is same. It does not comment any thing about the volume of the objects. If the density of the two objects is same, then only their volume will be same. If both the objects are not made up of the same material, they have most likely to have different volume. Rarely it may be same.
The density an object depends not only on the mass but also its volume i.e. D=M/V. Therefore, if two objects had the same mass and volume then they would have the same density. By contrast, if two objects had the same mass but different volumes then they would not have the same volume. In fact, the object with the least volume would be more dense or would have would have a greater density.
No, not unless they are made of the same substance. Different substances have different densities, which means that the same volumes will have different masses.
Density is not the same as mass. Density is mass divided by volume.Density is not the same as mass. Density is mass divided by volume.Density is not the same as mass. Density is mass divided by volume.Density is not the same as mass. Density is mass divided by volume.
No
Yes.