The easiest way to find the mass is to weigh it (not absolutely strictly true but OK). Then measure its height width and breadth. Multiply these together to get the volume. The density is the mass/volume. Try to keep in consisten units. Do all the measurements in cm and get the mass in grams and the density will be in g/cm3
A list for all the possible ways to solve for mass density and volume would take a one thousand page textbook to complete, but if you are talking about all of them in the same equation it is mass=density*volume
well really the density of the lungs and kidneys differ from each person as we are all unique. But the average textbook denisty is 1.239g-1cm cubed for the lungs and 1.03425g3 for the kidney
Yes, the density of an object has no relation the number of pieces that the object is divided into, nor to the size of the obect. For example: The density of 1 pound of steel is exactly the same as the density of 1 ton of identical steel, and the density of 1 mL of water is exactly the same as the density of one Liter of water. That is the textbook answer, in real life most cutting techniques disturb the boundary of the cut line. So if you want a real to life answer then the density is only changed at the cut line where temperature and pressure will effect the structure of the metal being cut. Textbook answer is density remains unchanged throughout the whole of the material no matter how many times you cut it. think of density as "how hard something is packed together at the molecular level". This is a ok way to look at density. Cheers!
Well im 10 years old with a science textbook sitting in front of me.... IT DOESNT SAY
That you are boring.The other textbook would say that.
The physical properties of a textbook are **************************
You can but this textbook on amazon.
Textbook of Biochemistry was created in 1928.
Economics - textbook - was created in 1948.
a. thesaurus b. French textbook c. grammar textbook d. Oxford English textbook = Oxford English textbook
I thinks it's where you take your textbook to school and turn them in.
Words that can be made from the letters in 'textbook' are:bebetBooBookbootboxoboeTexttotoetooTooktoottottote