Physics, asked by vmote307995, 6 months ago

If an oil having density equal to 900 kg/m^3 then what will be its specific gravity ?
(Hint: Enter number up to one decimal place)

Answers

Answered by nitinv2526
0

Answer:

Specific gravity is a ratio of the density of a substance to the density of a reference substance, usually water. Since the density of water is one gram per cubic centimeter, you calculate specific gravity by dividing the density of a substance by one gram per cubic centimeter.

Lookup the density of your sample material (or calculate it using our density calculator), then it divide by the density of freshwater at 4 °C, which is 1,000 kg/m³ (62.428 lb/ft³). And that's how to calculate specific gravity

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Answered by adityaadarsh961
0

density of oil is equal to 900 kg per metre cube

RD is equal to density of substance/ density of water 4°C

900 / 1000 = 0•9

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