Why equal volume of different substance have different masses?
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Answer:
The density of a substance is the relationship between the mass of the substance and how much space it takes up (volume).
The mass of atoms, their size, and how they are arranged determine the density of a substance.
Density equals the mass of the substance divided by its volume; D = m/v.
Objects with the same volume but different mass have different densities.
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Answered by
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Answer:
Equal volumes of different substances have different masses. For example, the mass of iron is much more than the mass of an equal volume of wood. This is because the particles of iron are more closely packed than those of the wood. to other words, iron is denser than wood.
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