Question 1062735
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Sandra’s mother bought her a cylindrical sugar container for her bakery. The container has a height of 1 meter 
and a radius of .25 meters. When the container is full, the sugar inside weighs 3 kg. What is the density of the sugar in kilograms per cubic meter?

Use the approximation of 3.14 for π in your calculations and round your answer to the nearest thousandth.
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Volume V = {{{pi*r^2*h}}} = {{{3.14*0.25^2*1}}} = 0.19625 m^3.


Density = {{{3_kg/V}}} = {{{3/0.19625}}} = 15.287 {{{kg/m^3}}}.


For the comparison, the water density is about 1000 {{{kg/m^3}}}.


Actually, as Wikipedia says, the sugar density is 1.59 {{{g/cm^3}}}, which is 1.59*10^3 {{{kg/m^3}}}.


So, there is a HUGE error in your input data.


Check your input.