while looking at a maths revisioni looked at reaaranging formulas, but there was something that confused me.
I know the density is mass / volume, but i've always done it as g/cm cubed, or another sensible unit like kg/m cubed. But in the book, it said g/cm to the minus cube, why? and what difference does it make?
No R1Geezer, x^(-3) does NOT mean cube root of x, it means 1/x^3. The cube root of x is written x^(1/3).
Bibblebub is right.
Another example would be:
speed =distance/time =s/t or s times t^(-1).
Using just numbers you can write things like:
2/3=2 times 3^(-1)=2 x 3^(-1)
1/2=1 x 2^(-1)=2^(-1) etc
Yes, OK.
gram cm to the minus cubed is g cm^(-3) or gm/cm^3, which, because of what I said in my first post and so did bibblebub, is grams per cm cubed, the usual units for density.
And that rounding is appropriate because you started off with a whole number of grams (780) and a whole number of cubic centimetres (84) and so quoting the answer to five decimal places or whatever doesn't make sense.
The reason this works is because of the rule that when you multiply the same quantity to different powers you add the powers:
x^a times x^b = x^(a+b), so:
x^3 times x^(-3) = x(3+-3)=x^(3-3)=x^(0)= 1
So x^(3) times x^(-3)=1
and therefore x^(3)=1/x^(-3) and vice versa.
if we'd have had a proper maths teacher we'd probably learnt little tthings like that, but they concentrate on the big things that get you the most points, but if you want to get full marks and thus an a* you have to know the little details like that.
Ideally they would be using the international scientific (SI) unit for density which is kg/m^3 (or kg m^-3 if you prefer). SI is an mks (metre kilogram second) system.
Grams per cubic cm is the obsolete cgs (centimetre gram second) system unit.