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50 milliliters
Fill the beaker with water, then pour it into a calibrated measuring jug
yes
if you had 1.5 liters of water, how many milliliters would you have?
280 milliliters = 9.47 fuild ounces
33ml
1 liter = 1000 milliliters 0.26 liters = 260 milliliters
800 milliliters or 0.8 liters
Beaker B contains water molecules with greater kinetic energy because higher temperature indicates higher thermal energy, which leads to faster movement of water molecules. The average kinetic energy of the molecules in Beaker B is higher than in Beaker A.
The volume of the water in Beaker X will be 100cm3, as you are not adding any more water to the equation (50X+100Y is not 150Y or X, but 50X+100Y) The total volume of matter in Beaker X will be 150cm3, and if the beaker is labelled, the volume measure will indicate 150cm3 due to the displacement of water. But as the answer to your question, the volume of water in Beaker X must be 100cm3 even though visual indicators will not show this due to the displacement of water by marbles
54ml
1 liter = 1000 milliliters (mille is Latin for 1000) 3 liters = 3000 milliliters
1.67 Liters of water
670 ml
There's something missing from the question. It could be the part that was supposed to make it challenging. -- Fill the 40-ml beaker. -- Use it to fill the 30-ml one. -- Now you have 10 ml in the 40-ml beaker. -- Pour the 10 ml into the 200-ml beaker. -- Do all of that again. -- Now you have 20 ml in the 200-ml beaker. It doesn't matter what size the 200-ml beaker is. You don't need that number at all.
25
The volume in US quarts is about 0.611.