201k views
1 vote
A sack of sugar has more than 50KG and a density of 1610KG/m³. What is the volume?​

User Thewayup
by
3.6k points

1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:


{\boxed {{\sf \: v = 0.031 \\ \\ \\ {m}^(3) \\ \\ \: \\ \\ }}}

Step-by-step explanation:

Cheers

Starting from the formula to determine the density, which states that:


\: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \boxed{\sfρ = (m)/(v)}

We clear v:


\: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \boxed{\sf \: v = (m)/(ρ)}


\sf \: m→ 50kg \\ \sf ρ→ 1610kg/m³ \ \\\sf v→ ?

Based on this data, you can plug it into the formula.


\: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \boxed{\sf \: v = \frac{50kg}{1610kg/ {m}^(3) }}


\: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \sf \: v = 0.031 {m}^(3)

The alpha.

User Dilavar Malek
by
4.4k points