Science, asked by dhritiyeshas63, 5 months ago

why density is measured in g/cm3

Answers

Answered by radhikaagarwal92
2

Answer:

Density is the mass of an object divided by its volume.

density equation

Density often has units of grams per cubic centimeter (g/cm3). Remember, grams is a mass and cubic centimeters is a volume (the same volume as 1 milliliter).

Density is a fundamental concept in the sciences; you will see it throughout your studies. It is used quite often in identifying rocks and minerals since the density of substances rarely changes significantly. For example, gold will always have a density of 19.3 g/cm3; if a mineral has a density other than that, it isn't gold.

You probably have an intuitive feeling for density in the materials you use often. For example, sponges are low in density; they have a low mass per unit volume. You are not surprised when a large sponge is easy to lift. In contrast, iron is dense. If you pick up an iron skillet, you expect it to be heavy.

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Answered by sanjeevkanchan655
2

Answer:

density is measured in g/cm*3 .

Explanation:

because, formula of density =mass /volume

And ,standard unit of mass is gram(g) and volume is measured in cm*3.So,gram/cm*3=gm/cm*3

that is why density is measured in g/cm*3

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