4.12g/cm cubed
.7231 cubic meters
To convert cups of sand to grams or kilograms, you'll have to have some idea of the density of the sand. The density of the sand will depend on the material it is composed of and the grain size. There is also a "moisture factor" to speak to water content and a "compaction factor" to cover how tightly it is compacted. Sounds technical, and it can be. But if you want to simplify things, just grab an "average" density and work from there. The density of sand can vary a bit, but a commonly cited value for "regular sand" is about 2000 kilograms/meter3 or so. There are about 4226.75 U.S. cups in a cubic meter, and that makes for about 0.473 kg or about 473 grams per cup.
Some components of sand, specifically shell fragments, will dissolve in acidic liquids, such as many juices. The primary parts of sand, silica and quartz, will not dissolve.
Sand is a solid it only pours when there are many sands involved.
Water has the highest specific heat, sand and granite could be very similar but there are very many types of sand so no definite relationship can be given without more information.
H2O : "~Footprints in the Sand~" has 12 episodes .
80
3
3 cubic meter
About One
With dry sand. 1.602 tonnes
depends of the mass of what u are measuring
it is 100 bags of sand/ballast
100
The weight varies; but if it's dry sand, the cubic meter will weigh around 1500 kilos.
It isn't clear what "units" you are talking about.
It depends of course a bit on the size of the wheelbarrow and on how high you want to pile up the sand. But a typical wheelbarrow might hold about 85 liters of sand. 1 cubic meter equals 1,000 liters. So you would need about 12 wheelbarrow loads to get 1 cubic meter.
How much cement sand and stone do you need for 1 cubic meter of concre