Density is a measure of mass per unit of volume. The higher an object's density, the higher its mass per volume. The average density of an object equals its total mass divided by its total volume. A denser object (such as iron) will have less volume than an equal mass of some less dense substance (such as water). The SI unit of density is the kilogram per cubic metre (kg/m3)
A graduated cylinder and a balance
Hydrometer measure the density of liquids.
Density = mass/volume.
Density = Mass / Volume. There is not an instrument that will measure both so you will need to measure them separately and calculate the density.
-- Measure its mass. -- Measure its volume. -- Divide its mass by its volume. The result is its density.
-- Measure its mass. -- Measure its volume. -- Divide its mass by its volume. The result is its density.
The density of a substance is the ratio of its mass to its volume. So, I would measure the mass and volume of a substance to calculate density.
It measured by the density of the size from the hydrometer.
Density is Mass/Volume. Without a measure of volume you cannot calculate density.
density can be measured with the help of hydrometers.
How can we measure the density of pvc compound if the thickness is 35 microns and the caoting with with 133 gsm?
-- Measure its mass. -- Measure its volume. -- Divide the mass by the volume. The result of the division is the object's density.
To measure the density of a gas you find the mass and volume, then divide the volume by the mass.