Specific Gravity Calculator
Input dry weight and submerged weight to compute specific gravity. Compares results against known mineral densities to suggest possible identifications.
AnalysisMeasurements
Result
Enter dry and submerged weights to calculate specific gravity.
Özgül Ağırlık
Density
Possible Minerals (SG range match)
No common minerals match this specific gravity.
How to Use
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1
Weigh the dry mineral specimen in air
Place the specimen on an accurate balance and record its dry weight in grams. For precision, use a balance capable of resolving 0.01 g for specimens in the 5–50 g range. Ensure the specimen is dry—moisture in pores or cracks lowers apparent air weight and introduces systematic error.
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2
Weigh the specimen while fully submerged in water
Suspend the specimen by a thin thread or wire from the balance arm so it hangs fully immersed in water without touching the container walls or bottom. Record the submerged weight. The weight loss equals the weight of the displaced water, which by Archimedes’ principle equals the specimen’s volume times the density of water (approximately 1.00 g/cm³ at 20°C).
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3
Calculate specific gravity and match to mineral candidates
The tool computes SG = Wₐᴵᵣ / (Wₐᴵᵣ − Wₛᵤᵇ) automatically. Enter both weights and review the ranked mineral matches. Consider that specific gravity alone rarely identifies a mineral uniquely; use the result alongside hardness, streak, and luster to narrow candidates to a single species.
About
Specific gravity measurement exploits Archimedes’ principle—that a submerged body experiences a buoyant force equal to the weight of displaced fluid—to determine mineral density without measuring volume directly. The method dates at least to Archimedes himself (c. 287–212 BCE), who reportedly used water displacement to assess the purity of a gold crown, and was adapted for systematic mineralogy in the 18th and 19th centuries as balance precision improved.
Specific gravity provides a particularly sensitive compositional proxy because it integrates both atomic mass and crystal packing efficiency. Within a mineral series, SG increases predictably with substitution of heavier elements: in the olivine series, pure forsterite (Mg₂SiO₄) has SG 3.27 while pure fayalite (Fe₂SiO₄) has SG 4.39, allowing estimation of iron-magnesium ratio from SG measurements in well-characterized specimens. Similarly, in plagioclase feldspar, SG increases from 2.62 in albite (NaAlSi₃O₈) to 2.76 in anorthite (CaAl₂Si₂O₈), reflecting calcium’s greater mass compared to sodium.
In gemology, specific gravity is a standard property reported in gem identification reports. The Gemological Institute of America and other major laboratories use hydrostatic weighing, heavy liquid immersion, and electronic gem testers calibrated against SG reference standards to identify unknown stones. Combined with refractive index, absorption spectrum, and fluorescence, specific gravity allows definitive identification of virtually all gem materials.