The volume of a gas does not depend on its mass. The volume of a gas is determined by factors such as temperature and pressure according to the ideal gas law, while the mass of a gas is a measure of the amount of substance present.
The density of a gas can be measured by determining its mass per unit volume. This is typically done by measuring the gas's pressure, temperature, and volume and using the ideal gas law to calculate the density. Alternatively, specialized instruments such as densitometers can be used for more accurate measurements.
That depends what you want to measure about the gas: its volume, mass, transparency, temperature, etc. The really isn't such a thing as a "unit of measurement of gas", there are units of measurement for mass, volume, temperature, etc., all of which can be attributes of a specific gas.
Light is a beam that is shot out of a light source or explosion of gas and photon particles give of that beam which does have a mass but todays technology is unable to measure it.
Yes, gas has mass. The mass of a gas is determined by the number of gas particles present and the type of gas molecules. The mass of gas can be measured using a balance or by determining the mass of the container before and after the gas is added.
Mass is the measure of matter in an objevt
The TOTAL mass of the sample stays the same, but keep in mind that you can only measure it accurately if you can keep the sample confined, which can be difficult when changing a liquid to a gas. When heating a gas, it usually expands (or increases pressure in a rigid container).
put the solid on a triple beam balance and measure till the line meets with zero.
Scales either measure mass, or weight - but they are callibrated to show mass (for example, kilograms).
2 examples are Gas analyzer-inserted in muffler Mass airflow machine-inserted in muffler Both measure gas emissions released from a vehicle.
The measure of an object's mass is called mass, and the measure of its velocity is called velocity.
The molecular mass of a compound is equal to 2 times its vapor density. This relationship is due to the fact that vapor density is defined as the mass of a gas under certain conditions relative to the mass of an equal volume of hydrogen gas, which has a molecular mass of approximately 2.