Calculates density as mass ÷ volume. Mass is in kilograms, volume in m³, and density in kg/m³.
Density is mass per unit volume. Of two objects the same size, the denser one is the heavier.
Density belongs to the material rather than to the lump. Take one litre of water or take ten, and the density is the same.
The defaults are a mass of 10 kg and a volume of 2 m³.
The density is 5 kg/m³.
Watch the units. The two common ones, g/cm³ and kg/m³, differ by a factor of 1000: 1 g/cm³ = 1000 kg/m³. Water is 1 g/cm³, which is the same as 1000 kg/m³. Enter kilograms and cubic metres here and the answer comes out in kg/m³.
The volume cannot be zero, since that would mean dividing by zero.
Anything less dense than water (1000 kg/m³) floats on it, and anything denser sinks. Ice, at about 917 kg/m³, floats. Iron, at about 7870 kg/m³, does not.
Materials expand as they warm, so density shifts a little with temperature. Precise work has to say at what temperature a figure holds.