ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Science Videos 686 videos
Anything that has a cell (bacteria, listen up!) has phospholipids that keep the cell contained and give it form and shape. Phospholipids protect us...
GMOs. Now that’s a scary word. Or is it? Guess it’s time to ask ourselves: WWMST? ...For those of us who don’t constantly ask ourselves “wh...
Chemistry: 3.7 Density 154 Views
Share It!
Description:
Having trouble with density? Don't worry, you're not dense. It's just a bit of a dense topic. Take a look at this video and we'll tell you everything you need to know.
Transcript
- 00:03
Meet Mortimer Thumb he's Tom thumb's lesser-known little brother [Mortimer waving next to his brother]
- 00:08
emphasis on little. For the past year Mortimer has been building his own boat
- 00:13
he dreams of setting sail in steering his homemade ship from one end of a
- 00:18
beaker filled with water to the other. When you're Mortimer's size well it's
- 00:22
safer to dream small. He finally completes his cube-shaped boat and is
Full Transcript
- 00:26
ready for the adventure of his lifetime, but he's a bit nervous he really doesn't [Mortimer looking apprehensive]
- 00:31
want his boat to sink. So to determine whether or not his boat will float he
- 00:36
has to consider its density and compare it to the density of water. Well the
- 00:41
formula for density is just mass divided by volume. Mortimer knows that if his
- 00:47
boat is less dense than water it'll float if it's denser than water, well then [Boat floating and then it sinks]
- 00:52
not so much... He knows that the density of water is one gram per cubic centimeter
- 00:57
even if he didn't know he could figure it out the beaker is a 500 milliliter
- 01:03
beaker full of water. 1 milliliter is the same as a centimeter cubed so the beaker
- 01:09
can hold 500 cubic centimeters of water well if Mortimer could get a big person
- 01:14
to help him measure the mass of the water, he'd find that it comes out to 500 [The beaker of water is put on a scale]
- 01:19
grams well 500 grams divided by 500 cubic centimeters reduces to 1 gram over
- 01:24
one cubic centimeter so there you go. All right now for the boat. Mortimer takes a
- 01:29
couple of separate measurements first he finds the mass of his little boat
- 01:33
plopping it onto the scale he discovers that the 'Voyager' weighs in at exactly 15
- 01:39
grams. Next he finds the volume of his boat he knows that the volume of the
- 01:44
cube is the area cube so he starts by finding the area of one side of his [Mortimer measuring up his boat]
- 01:49
little boat there, four centimeters times four centimeters is 16 centimeters and
- 01:54
since he then has to multiply by the depth of the cube, so four centimeters
- 01:59
there as well, it looks like the volume of his boat is 64 cubic centimeters.
- 02:05
All right now using the density formula, Mortimer takes the mass 15 [Board showing Mortimer's working]
- 02:09
grams and divides it by the volume 64 cubic centimeters and he winds up with point
- 02:15
23 grams per cubic centimeter meaning that the density of his vessel is much
- 02:21
less than the density of water so this puppy is going to float. Happily Mortimer
- 02:26
drops his boat into the beaker of water and hops in ready for the adventure of a [Mortimer chucks his boat in and then jumps in himself]
- 02:31
lifetime, unfortunately he sort of forgot to take into account his own mass... [Mortimer and his boat sink]
- 02:37
Oh well, little man overboard.
Related Videos
When you're about to marry the love of your life, not many things could stop you. However, finding out that your future hubby is keeping his crazy...
Here at Shmoop, we work for kids, not just the bottom line. Founded by David Siminoff and his wife Ellen Siminoff, Shmoop was originally conceived...
ACT Math: Elementary Algebra Drill 4, Problem 5. What is the solution to the problem shown?
AP® English Literature and Composition Passage Drill 1, Problem 1. Which literary device is used in lines 31 to 37?
AP® English Literature and Composition Passage Drill 2, Problem 1. What claim does Bacon make that contradicts the maxim "Whatsoever is delig...