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Which is denser ,1 kg of water or 10 kg of water?
explain?​

User ZayedUpal
by
8.3k points

1 Answer

7 votes

Answer:

The Densities are the same...

Step-by-step explanation:

Density

is a so-called intensive property, whose magnitude does not depend on the size of the system. For a given temperature, thus

10

k

g

of water has the same density as

1

k

g

of water:

Density,

ρ

=

Mass

Volume

ρ

1

=

10

k

g

10

L

=

1

k

g

L

1

or

1

g

c

m

3

ρ

2

=

1

k

g

1

L

=

1

k

g

L

1

or

1

g

c

m

3

And thus

ρ

1

and

ρ

2

are manifestly the same.

On the other hand, there are the so-called extensive properties, mass, moles, volume, etc. whose magnitude depends on the number of particles in the system.

User Moorthy GK
by
8.6k points

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