A solid weight 4.8g in air, 2.8g in water and 3.2 in kerosine calculate the relative density of the kerosine

show me how u solved it

first find the volume

It displaced 4.8 - 2.8 = 2 grams of water
water has density of 1 gram/ cm^3
so its volume is 2 cm^3
in kerosene it displaces the same volume = 2 cm^3
however that 2 cm^2 weighs
4.8 - 3.2 = 1.6 grams
so kerosene s 1.6 grams / 2 cm^3 = 0.8 grams/cm^3 or 0.8 times water density

To calculate the relative density of the kerosene, we need to compare its density with the density of water. The formula for relative density is:

Relative Density = Density of Substance / Density of Reference Substance

In this case, the density of water is our reference substance. We are given the weights of the solid in air, water, and kerosene, but we need to convert these weights to masses.

To convert the weights to masses, we use the formula:

Mass = Weight / Acceleration due to Gravity

Assuming the acceleration due to gravity is 9.8 m/s², we can calculate the masses of the solid in air, water, and kerosene.

Mass in air = 4.8g / 9.8 m/s² = 0.49 kg
Mass in water = 2.8g / 9.8 m/s² = 0.29 kg
Mass in kerosene = 3.2g / 9.8 m/s² = 0.33 kg

Now, we can calculate the density of kerosene using the formula:

Density = Mass / Volume

However, we don't have the volume of the solid in kerosene. But since the relative density is the ratio of densities, we can eliminate the volume from the equation. So we can calculate the density of kerosene using the masses alone.

Density of kerosene = Mass in kerosene / Volume in kerosene

Since the volume cancels out in the calculation, we can obtain the density of kerosene as:

Density of kerosene = Mass in kerosene / (Mass in air - Mass in water)

Density of kerosene = 0.33 kg / (0.49 kg - 0.29 kg)

Density of kerosene = 0.33 kg / 0.20 kg

Density of kerosene = 1.65 kg

Therefore, the relative density of kerosene is 1.65.