Question detail
A liquid has a density of 1.2 g/cm³. If you have 240 g of this liquid, calculate its volume (Density of materials) ? P43-010 Density of materials checkpoint
Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.
At a glance
Question
Type
exam_style
Style
Topic
Changes of state and the particle model
Question
A liquid has a density of 1.2 g/cm³. If you have 240 g of this liquid, calculate its volume (Density of materials) ? P43-010 Density of materials checkpoint
Answer
200 cm³ In P43-010, the answer must mention density, mass, volume and connect it to Density of materials.
Explanation
Particle lens: Describe arrangement, motion, spacing, collisions, or energy changes only when they are relevant here. This question asks: A liquid has a density of 1.2 g/cm³. If you have 240 g of this liquid, calculate its volume (Density of materials) ?. The correct response is 200 cm³ In P43-010, the answer must mention density, mass, volume and connect it to Density of materials., because density links mass and volume, so the answer must preserve which quantity is being calculated. In Density of materials, the marking point should connect directly to calculate volume when mass and density are known. If the question includes values, the working must keep the appropriate unit and operation; if it is an explanation, it must name the relevant particle behaviour or energy change. This item belongs to Changes of state and the particle model, so avoid answers that switch to a different quantity, confuse heat with temperature, or describe gas pressure without collisions when collisions are the reason. Checkpoint 36 is distinct because it uses this exact question context and the particle lens rather than a generic particle-model sentence.
Common mistake
Volume Calculation Confusion
Students often confuse the formula for calculating volume, mistakenly using mass divided by density instead of density divided by mass.
Remind students that to calculate volume when mass and density are known, they should use the formula: volume = mass / density.
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