Compound measures combine two quantities
What you will learn
Know the rule, then use it
These are the short notes. Read each one, then check you can use it in the worked example below.
Method
Density = mass/volume
Convert mass to grams
1.62 kg = 1620 g
Calculate the volume
Volume = 9 × 6 × 5 = 270 cm3
Apply the density formula
Density = mass/volume = = 6 g/cm3
Watch out
Students mix units — using kg with cm3 gives density in kg/cm3, not g/cm3
A rectangular block has mass 1.62 kg and dimensions 9 cm × 6 cm × 5 cm. Find its density in g/cm3.
Convert mass to grams: 1.62 kg = 1620 g.
Calculate the volume: Volume = 9 × 6 × 5 = 270 cm3.
Apply the density formula: Density = mass/volume = = 6 g/cm3.
Density = 6 g/cm3
Build up to the hardest questions
Do them in order. If you miss a step, read the solution, then redo the question without looking.
WorkedreasoningA rectangular block has mass 1.62 kg and dimensions 9 cm × 6 cm × 5 cm. Find its density in g/cm3.
3 marks4 minscompound-measures-workedShow solution
A rectangular block has mass 1.62 kg and dimensions 9 cm × 6 cm × 5 cm. Find its density in g/cm3.
- 1.Convert mass to grams: 1.62 kg = 1620 g.
- 2.Calculate the volume: Volume = 9 × 6 × 5 = 270 cm3.
- 3.Apply the density formula: Density = mass/volume = = 6 g/cm3.
Density = 6 g/cm3
- M1: convert mass to grams
- M1: calculate the volume
- M1: apply the density formula
- A1: Density = 6 g/cm3
Students mix units — using kg with cm3 gives density in kg/cm3, not g/cm3.Always convert mass and volume into consistent units before dividing.
DiagnosticrecallA liquid has density 0.8 g/cm3. Find the mass of 250 cm3.
1 mark2 minscompound-measures-q1Show solution
A liquid has density 0.8 g/cm3. Find the mass of 250 cm3.
- 1.Spot the skill: Density = mass/volume.
- 2.Use the convert mass to grams stage first, then calculate the volume.
- 3.Keep the final answer visible: 200 g.
200 g
- M1: use the correct density = mass/volume. pressure = force/area. speed = distance/time.these follow the same triangle structure.always check units — density in g/cm3 requires mass in grams and volume in cm3.
- A1: 200 g
Students mix units — using kg with cm3 gives density in kg/cm3, not g/cm3.Always convert mass and volume into consistent units before dividing.
EasyprocedureA force of 120 N acts on an area of 0.3 m2. Find the pressure in Pa.
2 marks3 minscompound-measures-q2Show solution
A force of 120 N acts on an area of 0.3 m2. Find the pressure in Pa.
- 1.Spot the skill: Density = mass/volume.
- 2.Use the calculate the volume stage first, then apply the density formula.
- 3.Keep the final answer visible: 400 Pa.
400 Pa
- M1: use the correct density = mass/volume. pressure = force/area. speed = distance/time.these follow the same triangle structure.always check units — density in g/cm3 requires mass in grams and volume in cm3.
- A1: 400 Pa
Students mix units — using kg with cm3 gives density in kg/cm3, not g/cm3.Always convert mass and volume into consistent units before dividing.
MediumreasoningGold has density 19.3 g/cm3. Find the volume of a 386 g gold bar.
3 marks4 minscompound-measures-q3Show solution
Gold has density 19.3 g/cm3. Find the volume of a 386 g gold bar.
- 1.Spot the skill: Density = mass/volume.
- 2.Use the apply the density formula stage first, then convert mass to grams.
- 3.Keep the final answer visible: 20 cm3.
20 cm3
- M1: use the correct density = mass/volume. pressure = force/area. speed = distance/time.these follow the same triangle structure.always check units — density in g/cm3 requires mass in grams and volume in cm3.
- A1: 20 cm3
Students mix units — using kg with cm3 gives density in kg/cm3, not g/cm3.Always convert mass and volume into consistent units before dividing.
Hardproblem solvingA 500 g object has density 2 g/cm3. Find its volume.
3 marks5 minscompound-measures-q4Show solution
A 500 g object has density 2 g/cm3. Find its volume.
- 1.Spot the skill: Density = mass/volume.
- 2.Use the convert mass to grams stage first, then calculate the volume.
- 3.Keep the final answer visible: 250 cm3.
250 cm3
- M1: use the correct density = mass/volume. pressure = force/area. speed = distance/time.these follow the same triangle structure.always check units — density in g/cm3 requires mass in grams and volume in cm3.
- A1: 250 cm3
Students mix units — using kg with cm3 gives density in kg/cm3, not g/cm3.Always convert mass and volume into consistent units before dividing.
Exam-stylemulti-stepA pressure of 50,000 Pa acts over 0.04 m2. Find the force.
4 marks6 minscompound-measures-q5Show solution
A pressure of 50,000 Pa acts over 0.04 m2. Find the force.
- 1.Spot the skill: Density = mass/volume.
- 2.Use the calculate the volume stage first, then apply the density formula.
- 3.Keep the final answer visible: 2000 N.
2000 N
- M1: use the correct density = mass/volume. pressure = force/area. speed = distance/time.these follow the same triangle structure.always check units — density in g/cm3 requires mass in grams and volume in cm3.
- A1: 2000 N
Students mix units — using kg with cm3 gives density in kg/cm3, not g/cm3.Always convert mass and volume into consistent units before dividing.
Grade 9 stretchproblem solvingA force of 180 N acts over an area of 0.012 m2. Find the pressure.
4 marks7 minscompound-g9Show solution
A force of 180 N acts over an area of 0.012 m2. Find the pressure.
- 1.Use pressure = force / area.
- 2.Substitute the values and include units.
15,000 Pa
- M1: use 180 / 0.012
- A1: 15,000 Pa
Do not rush straight into arithmetic. Select the relevant method and show a complete chain of working.
Switch between skills
Set a timer and attempt all four questions before opening any answers. This is closer to the way skills appear in a real paper.
1Compound measures - 2 marksA liquid has density 0.8 g/cm3. Find the mass of 250 cm3.Mark answer
200 g
2Ratio and sharing - 2 marksTwo people share profit in ratio 5:3. Total profit £640. Find each share.Mark answer
£400 and £240
3Fractions and ratios - 2 marksA map scale is 1:25,000. Express as a fraction.Mark answer
,000
4Direct and inverse proportion - 3 marksy ∝ 1/x2. When x = 2, y = 9. Find y when x = 6.Mark answer
1
- I can explain the method for compound measures.
- I can show clear working without skipping key steps.
- I can avoid this mistake: Students mix units — using kg with cm3 gives density in kg/cm3, not g/cm3.Always convert mass and volume into consistent units before dividing.
This guide follows the AQA GCSE Mathematics 8300 specification. Practice questions are original Learnova questions shaped around official content and exam skills.