Density Calculator

Calculate density, mass, or volume using the density formula ρ = m/V. Includes material database.

Density Calculator

Calculate:

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Density Formula:

ρ = m / V

Density = Mass / Volume

Density

2.0000 g/cm³

🧊Density
2.0000 g/cm³
⚖️Mass
100.00 g
📦Volume
50.00 cm³
💧Specific Gravity
2.0000

Density in Different Units:

g/cm³2.0000
kg/m³2000.0000
kg/L2.0000
lb/ft³124.8560
lb/gal16.6900

Water Behavior

Sinks in water

Buoyancy force: -0.4905 N

Similar Materials:

Concrete2.4 g/cm³
Glass2.5 g/cm³
Honey1.42 g/cm³
Plastic (PVC)1.4 g/cm³
Aluminum2.7 g/cm³

Common Material Densities

Metals

Gold19.3 g/cm³
Silver10.5 g/cm³
Copper8.96 g/cm³
Iron7.87 g/cm³
Steel8.05 g/cm³
Aluminum2.7 g/cm³
Lead11.34 g/cm³
Titanium4.5 g/cm³

Liquids

Sea water1.025 g/cm³
Milk1.03 g/cm³
Olive oil0.92 g/cm³
Gasoline0.75 g/cm³
Mercury13.6 g/cm³
Honey1.42 g/cm³
Ethanol0.789 g/cm³
Air0.001225 g/cm³

Other Materials

Glass2.5 g/cm³
Concrete2.4 g/cm³
Wood (oak)0.75 g/cm³
Wood (pine)0.55 g/cm³
Ice0.917 g/cm³
Rubber1.2 g/cm³
Plastic (PVC)1.4 g/cm³
Water (4°C)1 g/cm³

Understanding Density

What is Density?

Density is how much mass is packed into a given volume. Higher density means more mass per unit volume. It's an intensive property - it doesn't depend on the amount of material.

Specific Gravity

Specific gravity is the ratio of a substance's density to water's density. Values less than 1 float in water, greater than 1 sink.

What is Density?

Density is the mass per unit volume of a substance. It's an intensive property, meaning it doesn't depend on the amount of material—a small piece of gold has the same density as a large gold bar.

PropertyDescriptionKey Point
DefinitionMass per unit volumeρ = m/V
SI UnitKilogram per cubic meterkg/m³
Common UnitGram per cubic centimeterg/cm³
NatureIntensive propertySame for any sample size

Key relationship: 1 g/cm³ = 1,000 kg/m³ = 1 kg/L. Water's density of exactly 1 g/cm³ at 4°C is not coincidental—the gram was originally defined this way.

Density Formula

ρ = m / V

Where:

  • ρ= Density (kg/m³ or g/cm³)
  • m= Mass (kg or g)
  • V= Volume (m³ or cm³)

Density of Common Materials

Material densities span several orders of magnitude:

MaterialDensity (g/cm³)Density (kg/m³)
Air (sea level, 20°C)0.00121.2
Styrofoam0.0550
Cork0.24240
Balsa wood0.16160
Oak wood0.75750
Ice0.92920
Water (4°C)1.001,000
Seawater1.031,030
Aluminum2.702,700
Steel7.857,850
Copper8.968,960
Lead11.3411,340
Gold19.3019,300
Platinum21.4521,450
Osmium (densest element)22.5922,590

Floating and Sinking

Whether an object floats or sinks depends on its density relative to the surrounding fluid:

ConditionResultExample
ρ_object < ρ_fluidFloatsWood in water, helium balloon
ρ_object = ρ_fluidNeutral buoyancySubmarine, fish with swim bladder
ρ_object > ρ_fluidSinksStone in water, air bubble rising
ObjectDensity (g/cm³)In Water
Ice0.92Floats (92% submerged)
Human body0.95-1.05Borderline (depends on fat/muscle)
Egg (fresh)1.03Sinks slowly
Egg (old)~0.95Floats (gas buildup)

Archimedes' Principle: An object floats when it displaces water weighing equal to its own weight.

Fraction Submerged

Fraction submerged = ρ_object / ρ_fluid

Where:

  • ρ_object= Density of floating object
  • ρ_fluid= Density of fluid

Specific Gravity

Specific gravity (relative density) is the ratio of a substance's density to a reference (usually water):

ConceptFormulaNote
Specific gravitySG = ρ_substance / ρ_waterDimensionless number
For water referenceSG = ρ (in g/cm³)Since ρ_water = 1 g/cm³
API gravity (petroleum)API = 141.5/SG - 131.5Higher API = lighter oil
SubstanceSpecific GravityApplication
Gasoline0.72-0.78Fuel industry
Diesel fuel0.82-0.95Fuel industry
Milk1.028-1.035Dairy quality testing
Battery acid1.26-1.28Fully charged battery
Honey1.36-1.45Food industry
Antifreeze solution1.05-1.10Automotive testing

Advantage: Specific gravity is independent of units—SG = 2.7 means 2.7 times denser than water regardless of whether you measure in g/cm³ or kg/m³.

Temperature Effects on Density

Temperature significantly affects density, especially for gases:

MaterialTemperature EffectMagnitude
GasesInversely proportional to TLarge effect (ρ ∝ 1/T)
LiquidsDecreases with T (usually)Moderate effect
SolidsDecreases with TSmall effect
Water (anomaly!)Max density at 4°CUnusual behavior
Water TemperatureDensity (g/cm³)Volume Change
0°C (ice)0.9167+9% from 4°C
0°C (liquid)0.9998-0.02% from 4°C
4°C (maximum)1.0000Reference
20°C0.9982+0.18%
100°C0.9584+4.3%

Water's anomaly: Water is densest at 4°C, which is why lakes freeze from the top down, allowing aquatic life to survive below.

Ideal Gas Density

ρ = PM / (RT)

Where:

  • P= Pressure (Pa)
  • M= Molar mass (kg/mol)
  • R= Gas constant (8.314 J/mol·K)
  • T= Temperature (K)

Measuring Density

Several methods exist for measuring density:

MethodPrincipleBest For
Mass and volumeρ = m/V directlyRegular-shaped solids
Water displacementArchimedes' principleIrregular solids
HydrometerBuoyancy depthLiquids
PycnometerKnown volume vesselPrecise liquid/powder measurement
Digital densimeterOscillating tubeHigh-precision liquids

Archimedes' method: Weigh object in air (m_air), then submerged in water (m_water). Density = m_air × ρ_water / (m_air - m_water).

Practical Applications

Density measurements have many practical applications:

ApplicationDensity RelevanceExample
Ship designHull must displace enough waterSteel ships float despite dense metal
Hot air balloonsHeated air is less denseBuoyancy lifts the balloon
Battery testingAcid SG indicates chargeSG 1.265 = fully charged
Gemstone testingDensity identifies gemsDiamond: 3.52 g/cm³
Medical diagnosticsBone density scansOsteoporosis detection
Quality controlConsistent material propertiesConcrete, metals, plastics

Worked Examples

Calculate Object Density

Problem:

A metal block has mass 540 g and dimensions 4 cm × 3 cm × 5 cm. What is its density and what metal might it be?

Solution Steps:

  1. 1Calculate volume: V = 4 × 3 × 5 = 60 cm³
  2. 2Apply density formula: ρ = m/V
  3. 3Substitute: ρ = 540 / 60 = 9.0 g/cm³
  4. 4Compare to known metals: Copper is 8.96 g/cm³
  5. 5Conclusion: Likely copper

Result:

Density = 9.0 g/cm³ (likely copper)

Will It Float?

Problem:

A wooden sphere has mass 400 g and volume 500 cm³. Will it float in water, and how much will be submerged?

Solution Steps:

  1. 1Calculate density: ρ = 400/500 = 0.8 g/cm³
  2. 2Compare to water: 0.8 < 1.0, so it floats
  3. 3Fraction submerged = ρ_wood / ρ_water = 0.8/1.0 = 0.8
  4. 480% of the sphere is underwater

Result:

Floats with 80% submerged (20% above water)

Find Mass from Density

Problem:

A gold bar measures 25 cm × 5 cm × 2 cm. Gold density is 19.3 g/cm³. What is its mass?

Solution Steps:

  1. 1Calculate volume: V = 25 × 5 × 2 = 250 cm³
  2. 2Rearrange formula: m = ρ × V
  3. 3Substitute: m = 19.3 × 250 = 4,825 g
  4. 4Convert: 4,825 g = 4.825 kg ≈ 10.6 lbs

Result:

Mass = 4.825 kg (about 10.6 lbs)

Tips & Best Practices

  • 1 g/cm³ = 1,000 kg/m³ = 1 kg/L: Easy conversions for water-based reference
  • Objects float when their density is less than the surrounding fluid
  • Fraction submerged equals the density ratio (object/fluid) for floating objects
  • Specific gravity is dimensionless—it's the same number regardless of units
  • Temperature affects density: most materials expand when heated (exception: water below 4°C)
  • Use water displacement to measure the volume of irregular objects
  • Average density of a hollow object includes the air space

Frequently Asked Questions

Ice is less dense (0.917 g/cm³) than liquid water (1.0 g/cm³) because of water's unusual molecular structure. When water freezes, hydrogen bonds force molecules into a hexagonal crystal structure with more empty space than liquid water. This anomaly is crucial for life—lakes freeze from the top, insulating the water below and allowing aquatic life to survive winter.
Ships float because of their overall density, not just the material. A steel ship has a hollow hull containing mostly air, making its average density (total mass ÷ total volume including air) less than water's density. The ship displaces water equal to its weight (Archimedes' Principle). If you crumpled the steel into a solid ball, it would sink.
Density is mass per volume with units (g/cm³ or kg/m³). Specific gravity is density relative to water, so it's dimensionless (no units). For water at 4°C, specific gravity equals the numerical value of density in g/cm³. Specific gravity of 2.7 means the substance is 2.7 times denser than water, regardless of the unit system used.
Air density decreases with altitude because pressure drops (less air above compressing it). At sea level, air density is about 1.225 kg/m³. At 3,000 m (10,000 ft), it's about 0.91 kg/m³ (74%). This is why aircraft engines lose power at altitude, why athletes train at high elevation, and why cooking times change in mountains.
As water cools, it contracts like most substances until reaching 4°C. Below 4°C, hydrogen bonding begins forming the ice-like hexagonal structure, causing expansion before freezing. This 'anomalous expansion' means water at 4°C sinks to the bottom of lakes in winter, while colder water (and ice) stays at the top, insulating the depths.
A hydrometer is a weighted glass tube that floats at different depths depending on liquid density. In denser liquids, more buoyancy force acts on a smaller submerged volume, so the hydrometer rides higher. The scale on the stem shows density or specific gravity directly where the liquid surface intersects. Hydrometers are used for testing battery acid, antifreeze, beer brewing, and more.

Sources & References

Last updated: 2026-01-22