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23 March, 02:26

An investor paid market price for a chunk of gold that he was told was pure. The gold bar had a mass of 440 g, but was slightly irregular so an exact volume could not be calculated. The investor filled a large graduated cylinder with water, immersed the chunk of gold, and observed an increase in the apparent volume of material in the graduated cylinder of 25.0 ml. Pure gold has a density of 19.3 g/cm 3. Did the investor get his money's worth? Why or why not?

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  1. 23 March, 04:04
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    No. the investor didn't get his money worth gold.

    Explanation:

    Density of pure gold = 19.3 g/cm³

    Mass of gold bar = 440 g

    volume replaced by gold bar = 25 ml

    Now we have to find the volume of the gold bar using its mass and volume as,

    Volume = Mass / density = 440 g / 19.3 g/cm³

    = 22.79 ≈ 23 ml

    So the investor didn't get his money worth gold.
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