top of page

Keshu

Public·13 members

Density calculations

Density calculations


1. What is Mass?


Mass = how much matter an object has.

Key points

  • It does not change with location (Earth, Moon, space).

  • Different from weight (weight depends on gravity).

Units of Mass

  • kilogram (kg) → SI unit

  • gram (g)

  • milligram (mg)

Conversions

  • 1 kg = 1000 g

  • 1 g = 1000 mg

Mass Calculation

Mass is usually measured using a balance, but it can also be calculated using density and volume​


2. What is Volume?


Volume = the amount of space an object occupies.

Units of Volume

  • cubic meter (m³) → SI unit

  • cubic centimeter (cm³)

  • liter (L), milliliter (mL)

Conversions

  • 1 m³ = 1000 L

  • 1 L = 1000 mL

  • 1 cm³ = 1 mL

Volume of Regular Solids


Cube V= a³

Cuboid V= l x b x h

Cylinder V=πr²h

4

Sphere V=​---- πr³

3

3. What is Density?


Density = mass per unit volume. It tells how compact or heavy something is for its size.


Volume

Density= ---------

Mass​

Units of Density

  • kg/m³ → SI unit

  • g/cm³ (very common in school problems)

Important Concept

  • Higher density → object sinks

  • Lower density → object floats


4. Density–Mass–Volume Triangle


This triangle helps you remember formulas:

Mass

   ----------

   Density | Volume

From the triangle:

  • Mass = Density × Volume

  • Density = Mass ÷ Volume

  • Volume = Mass ÷ Density


Example Problems

Example 1: Find Density

Mass = 200 g Volume = 50 Mass cm³

                 200

Density= ------ = 4 g / cm³

                  50


Example 2: Find Mass

Density = 8 g/cm³ Volume = 10 cm³

Mass=8×10=80 g


Example 3: Find Volume

Mass = 540 g Density = 2 g/cm³

540

Volume = ------ =270 cm³

2


Floating & Sinking Rule

Object floats if:


Object density<Liquid density


Object sinks if:


Object density>Liquid density


Density of water = 1 g/cm³


Why is Density = Mass ÷ Volume?

1. What density actually means

Density tells us how much mass is packed into a given space.

In simple words, it means:

How heavy something is for its size.

So density must compare:

  • Mass → how much matter an object has

  • Volume → how much space it occupies

This comparison is done using division, not multiplication.

2. Real-life example: Sponge vs Iron (same volume)

Imagine:

  • 1 cm³ of sponge

  • 1 cm³ of iron

They have the same volume, but:

  • Sponge has very little mass

  • Iron has much more mass

So the question becomes:

How much mass is there in one unit of volume?

That idea is written as: Mass Density = -------- Why is Density = Mass ÷ Volume?

1. What density actually means

Density tells us how much mass is packed into a given space.

In simple words, it means:

How heavy something is for its size.

So density must compare:

  • Mass → how much matter an object has

  • Volume → how much space it occupies

This comparison is done using division, not multiplication.

2. Real-life example: Sponge vs Iron (same volume)

Imagine:

  • 1 cm³ of sponge

  • 1 cm³ of iron

They have the same volume, but:

  • Sponge has very little mass

  • Iron has much more mass

So the question becomes:

How much mass is there in one unit of volume?

That idea is written as:

Mass

Density = ----------

Volume


3. Why not Mass × Volume?

If we multiplied mass and volume:

  • Bigger objects would automatically seem denser

  • This gives incorrect physical meaning

Example:

  • A balloon has a very large volume but very small mass

  • Multiplication would give a large value, which is misleading

Division removes the effect of size and shows how tightly matter is packed.

4. Mathematical logic

If:

  • Volume stays the same

  • Mass increases

Then density should increase.Division shows this correctly.

If:

  • Mass stays the same

  • Volume increases

Then density should decrease. Division again gives the correct result.

  1. Scientific definition

    Scientists defined density as:

    Mass per unit volume

The word “per” always means division.

Examples:

  • Speed = distance per time

  • Pressure = force per area

  • Density = mass per volume

    6. One-line

Density is defined as mass per unit volume, therefore density equals mass divided by volume.

20 Views

Ima

New Plan


No
bottom of page