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Key points

  • The of an object or substance is its divided by its .

  • The units of density depend on the units used for mass and volume. The most commonly used units are grams per cubic centimetre (g/cm鲁) or kilograms per cubic metre (kg/m鲁).

  • The density of a substance depends both on the mass of the , and how closely spaced they are. This means that density changes when substances change state, and when they are heated or cooled.

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Video - Densities of the states

Can you answer these questions based on the video?

  1. Why does a balloon filled with helium float and one filled with water doesn鈥檛?

  2. Why do solids generally have high densities?

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Calculating density

The iron cube is much heavier than the wooden cube, even though they are both the same size. This is because the iron cube has a much higher density. The cube of polystyrene is the same size but is lighter than both because it has an even lower density.

An infographic showing three cubes, iron, wood and polystyrene, each with a different density

Objects with a higher density feel heavier for their size because more matter is packed into the same space.

Density can be measured in lots of different units, but the most commonly used units are grams per cubic centimetre (g/cm鲁) and kilograms per cubic metre (kg/m鲁).

The density of an object or a substance is its mass, divided by its volume. We use the formula:

\(density = mass 梅 volume\)

to calculate the density of an object or substance.

For example, the iron cube has a volume of 8 cm鲁 and a mass of 63 g, so:

\(density = mass 梅 volume\)

\(density = 63 梅 8\)

\(density = 7.9 g/cm鲁\)

The wooden cube has a volume of 8 cm鲁 and a mass of 4 g, so:

\(density = mass 梅 volume\)

\(density = 4 梅 8\)

\(density = 0.5 g/cm鲁\)

A block of polystyrene packing material has a volume of 200 cm鲁 and a mass of 7g. What is the density of the polystyrene?

Three question marks

Did you know?

A typical neutron star (an object left over when some large stars stop shining) contains more mass than the Sun but is only around 20km across, which results in an extremely high density.

A teaspoon of material from a neutron star would have a mass of around 5 billion tonnes.

Three question marks
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Measuring density

Densities state scale

The two quantities you need to measure in order to work out the density of an object are and .

To measure mass place the object on a top pan balance and read off the mass.

Densities state scale
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Finding the volume of a regular shape

Finding the volume of a regular shape can also be done by direct measurement. For example, for a cuboid, measure the sides and multiply length by width by height:

\(volume = length \times width\times height\)

\(v = l \times w \times h\)

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Finding the volume of an irregular shape

To find the volume of an irregular object that cannot be measured with a ruler, use a eureka can.

A eureka can is filled with water and when you place an object in the water, the water overflows. The eureka can has a spout so that you can capture the overflowing water and measure its volume.

The volume of water is the same as the volume of the object.

An infographic showing a ball in a eureka can, displacing water into a measuring cylinder
A sign saying remember

Once you have measured the mass and volume, you can calculate the density using the same equation:\(Density = \frac{mass}{volume}\)

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Densities of the states

An iceberg in the sea
Image caption,
Water, ice and water vapour are the same substance in different states. Each one has a different density.

Different substances have different densities. For example:

  • solid steel has a density of 7.82 g/cm鲁

  • liquid water has a density of 1.00 g/cm鲁

  • air (in its gaseous form) has a density of 0.0012 g/cm鲁

The (steel) has the highest density, the (air) has the lowest density, and the density of the (water) is in between.

The density of a substance depends both on the mass of the , and how closely spaced they are.

An iceberg in the sea
Image caption,
Water, ice and water vapour are the same substance in different states. Each one has a different density.
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Figure caption,
Solids have the highest densities because the particles are packed closely together. Gases have the lowest densities because the particles are widely spaced.

Solids

The particles in solids are very close together. They are tightly packed, so solids have a high density.

Liquids

The particles in liquids are close together. Although they are randomly arranged, they are still tightly packed, giving liquids high densities. The density of a substance as a liquid is usually only slightly less than its density as a solid. For example:

  • the density of solid aluminium is 2.72 g/cm鲁

  • the density of liquid aluminium is 2.38 g/cm鲁

This means that liquid aluminium floats on top of solid aluminium.

Water is different from most substances. It is less dense as a solid than as a liquid, because its particles move apart slightly on freezing. This is why ice cubes and icebergs float on liquid water.

Gases

The particles in gases are very far apart, so gases have a very low density.

Liquid mercury in a small bottle
Image caption,
Mercury has a very high density. Even this small bottle of mercury would have a large mass, so would feel very heavy.

Did you know?

Some liquids have a higher density than solids. For example, wood is a solid but has a lower density than water, which is why wood generally floats on top of water.

Liquid mercury has a very high density of 13.5 g/cm鲁 which is a higher density than steel or lead.

Liquid mercury in a small bottle
Image caption,
Mercury has a very high density. Even this small bottle of mercury would have a large mass, so would feel very heavy.
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Expanding and contracting

Expanding

As an object or substance gets hotter, its vibrate more. The increase in vibration means they push each other away - the more vibration there is, the bigger the distance between the particles.

More distance between each particle means that the substance will now take up more space - it has .

An infographic showing particles close together before heat and spread out and vibrating after heat

Contracting

The expanding effect happens for solids and liquids and can be reversed by cooling. The particle vibrations get smaller so the distance between particles gets less. The substance .

Changing density in an expanding object

When an object expands, it doesn鈥檛 gain any particles. Its mass remains the same although its volume increases. This means the object has a lower density. In other words, the object has the same mass in a bigger volume.

Changing density in a contracting object

When an object contracts, it has the same mass in a smaller volume so density increases.

Train track
Image caption,
The gaps in the track allow the track to expand safely in hot weather.

Did you know?

Bridges and railway tracks are built with small gaps between sections to allow for expansion in the summer. Without these gaps, the structures would expand and bend out of shape as they warm up.

Train track
Image caption,
The gaps in the track allow the track to expand safely in hot weather.
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Test your knowledge

Quiz - Multiple choice

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Play the Atomic Labs game! game

Try out practical experiments in this KS3 science game.

Play the Atomic Labs game!
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More on Solids, liquids and gases

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