Density

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Avatar of ToothStrikr

Can you change the density of an object by modifying its shape? Like if I had a toy and I squeezed it, would it’s density be different from when it is normal?

Avatar of Zestythefifth
Yes bc density is the amount of mass in an space/object. If the space changes the density changes
Avatar of Zestythefifth
Well it i should say material, not mass
Avatar of WorkerDroneUzi

It becomes black hole

Avatar of LireyTheOwl

No. Density depends on volume and mass, not the shape. So you can squeeze it all you want, as long as its mass and volume stays the same (which means you havent cut a piece out of it or put some water in it), the density will remains unchanged.

This is a chess website btw, why is this question here?

Avatar of AbyssalSludge
JustRileyNow wrote:

No. Density depends on volume and mass, not the shape. So you can squeeze it all you want, as long as its mass and volume stays the same (which means you havent cut a piece out of it or put some water in it), the density will remains unchanged.

This is a chess website btw, why is this question here?

Welcome to the Off Topic Forums.

Avatar of rooksb4

Density is how closely packed particles are, not the shape.

Avatar of WorkerDroneUzi

Is black hole

Avatar of LITO13mtz
It is dense
Avatar of LITO13mtz
Densely packed into the present tense
Avatar of SriyoTheGreat
JustRileyNow wrote:

No. Density depends on volume and mass, not the shape. So you can squeeze it all you want, as long as its mass and volume stays the same (which means you havent cut a piece out of it or put some water in it), the density will remains unchanged.

Except that, when you squeeze something it's volume decreases.

Avatar of LireyTheOwl
SriyogeshS wrote:
JustRileyNow wrote:

No. Density depends on volume and mass, not the shape. So you can squeeze it all you want, as long as its mass and volume stays the same (which means you havent cut a piece out of it or put some water in it), the density will remains unchanged.

Except that, when you squeeze something it's volume decreases.

which means you have cut a piece of air out of it. Sounds crazy, but it's science.

Avatar of satan_llama

Looks like someone gotta do their school homework.

Avatar of SriyoTheGreat
JustRileyNow wrote:
SriyogeshS wrote:
JustRileyNow wrote:

No. Density depends on volume and mass, not the shape. So you can squeeze it all you want, as long as its mass and volume stays the same (which means you havent cut a piece out of it or put some water in it), the density will remains unchanged.

Except that, when you squeeze something it's volume decreases.

which means you have cut a piece of air out of it. Sounds crazy, but it's science.

Why exactly?

Avatar of ToothStrikr

I’m in middle school I’m in just curious about this. It’s not homework