Length measures the distance between two points, volume measures the amount of space an object occupies, mass measures the amount of matter in an object, weight measures the force of gravity acting on an object, density measures how compact the matter in an object is, and temperature measures the degree of hotness or coldness of an object.
The density of a metal can be measured by dividing its mass by its volume. The formula for density is density = mass/volume. This can be done by weighing the metal to find its mass and then calculating its volume using measurements such as length, width, and height.
Mass is typically used to measure how heavy an object is, including animals like dogs. Volume, weight, length, and density are not direct measures of weight or heaviness in this context.
length: ruler volume: i dont know the name of this process. put it into a container with certain amount of water and measure the increase of water level. the volume is the base area of the container multiplies the increase of water level temperature: thermometer mass: balance (most preferably an electronic one)
You would use a balance to measure the mass of an object and a ruler or calipers to measure its volume. Density is calculated by dividing the mass of an object by its volume.
To measure the density of an object, you would need its mass and volume. Density is calculated by dividing the mass of the object by its volume. The formula for density is: density = mass/volume.
The answer depends on what characteristic you wish to measure: its length, base area, volume, mass, density, optical density, temperature, and so on.
Length. . . . . . . . . meter Mass . . . . . . . . . . kilogram Volume . . . . . . . . cubic meter Density . . . . . . . . gram/cm^3 Time . . . . . . . . . . second Temperature . . . Kelvin
The answer depends on what you want to measure: its mass, length, "equatorial" circumference, volume, density, temperature, conductivity, ...
Weigh the material in pounds. Then measure the length, width and height. Do this in feet. Calculate the volume by multiplying length x width x height = Volume. Volume = length x width x height Divide the weight by the volume: Weight / Volume Density = Weight / Volume Your density is in units of lbs per cubic foot
The density of a metal can be measured by dividing its mass by its volume. The formula for density is density = mass/volume. This can be done by weighing the metal to find its mass and then calculating its volume using measurements such as length, width, and height.
These are all easy to find in your book: Length . . . . . . . Meter Mass . . . . . . . . . Kilogram Volume . . . . . . . Cubic Meter (* Liter is 1/1000th m3, or one dm3) Density . . . . . . . Kilogram per cubic meter Time .. . . . . . . . . Second Temperature . . . Kelvin or Celsius degree (same size)
Two physical properties that can be measured are length, which is a measure of the size of an object in one dimension, and temperature, which is a measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles in a substance.
That depends what you want to measure: length, width, volume, weight, mass, density, etc.
Mass is typically used to measure how heavy an object is, including animals like dogs. Volume, weight, length, and density are not direct measures of weight or heaviness in this context.
KilogrammetersecondCoulombTesladegrees Kelvin
The question cannot be answered. Density is a measure of mas per unit volume, or the ratio of mass and volume. 13 millimetres is a measure of distance or length: there is no information in the question about the volume.
Density = mass/volume.