Physics, asked by swayamprabhasahoo5, 5 months ago

heating?
c)Describe an experiment to determine the density of an irregular solid
along with a diagram ?
03​

Answers

Answered by Anujyadav112
2

Answer:

The density of something is just the mass divided by the volume:

The density of something is just the mass divided by the volume: D = m/V

The density of something is just the mass divided by the volume: D = m/V The mass you can measure on a balance or a scale, and the volume is the amount of space the object occupies. You can find the volume of an irregular object by immersing it in water in a beaker or other container with volume markings, and by seeing how much the level goes up.

The density of something is just the mass divided by the volume: D = m/V The mass you can measure on a balance or a scale, and the volume is the amount of space the object occupies. You can find the volume of an irregular object by immersing it in water in a beaker or other container with volume markings, and by seeing how much the level goes up. You can use this relation backwards too -- if you know what material an object is made of, you can look up its density in a book. Measuring its mass allows you to compute the volume.

The density of something is just the mass divided by the volume: D = m/V The mass you can measure on a balance or a scale, and the volume is the amount of space the object occupies. You can find the volume of an irregular object by immersing it in water in a beaker or other container with volume markings, and by seeing how much the level goes up. You can use this relation backwards too -- if you know what material an object is made of, you can look up its density in a book. Measuring its mass allows you to compute the volume. Tom

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