(1.5 m^3) • (1.05 kg/m^3) = 1.575 kg. That's quite a bag you've got there ! 1 m^3 is like 264 gallons of blood. Hope the poor patient survives the transfusion. Also, the actual density of blood is around 1.05 g/cm^3, or 1050 kg/m^3. The blood they're giving the guy in this question is about 18% less dense than the AIR in his hospital room, and they're pumping 264 gallons of it into him. Maybe THAT'S his whole problem.
Answer:
mass =1.575 kg: mass of a blood bag
Explanation:
Conceptual analysis
We apply the formula to calculate the density:
ρ=m/V Formula (1)
Where:
ρ:Density in kg/m³
mass: mass in kg
V= Volume in m³
Unknown data
ρ=1.05 kg/m³
V= 1.5 m³
Problem developmentTo calculate the mass we replace the known data in the formula (1)
[tex]1.05 \frac{kg}{m^{3} } =\frac{mass}{1.5m^{3} }[/tex]
1.05 [tex]\frac{kg}{m^{3} }[/tex]*1.5 m³= mass
mass =1.575 kg: mass of a blood bag