Mass is defined as the amount of matter in an object, which is directly proportional to both its volume (amount of space an object occupies) and density (mass per unit volume). Mathematically, mass can be calculated by multiplying density and volume because the more dense an object is for its volume, the more mass it will have.
No, density is defined as mass per unit volume. Mathematically, density = mass/volume.
No, the density of a substance is equal to its mass divided by its volume. Density is a measure of how much mass is contained in a given volume of a substance.
Density. This is quantified as a mass over a volume, so if you know the volume, the density will allow you to determine the mass of an object. Density equals mass divided by volume so mass is equal to density multiplied by volume.
Density is mass divided by volume
The mass of a cube is equal to the volume times the density, so side cubed times density. The corresponding SI units would be: meters for length; kilogram per cubic meters for volume; kilograms for mass.
since density equal to mass/volume then mass=density times volume mathematically mass=density *volume
No, density is defined as mass per unit volume. Mathematically, density = mass/volume.
No, the density of a substance is equal to its mass divided by its volume. Density is a measure of how much mass is contained in a given volume of a substance.
Volume is equal to mass over density. In other words: V = M/D
Density is equal to the mass divided by the volume.
I think height times width.
Density. This is quantified as a mass over a volume, so if you know the volume, the density will allow you to determine the mass of an object. Density equals mass divided by volume so mass is equal to density multiplied by volume.
Density is mass divided by volume
Density = (mass) divided by (volume)Mass = (Density) times (volume)
The mass of a cube is equal to the volume times the density, so side cubed times density. The corresponding SI units would be: meters for length; kilogram per cubic meters for volume; kilograms for mass.
Not comparable - a liter is a unit of volume, a kilogram is a unit of mass. For specific substances, if you know the density, mass = volume times density.
No, mass divided by volume equals density.