Yes.
Cubic meter would be the standard unit; other units are cubic decimeter (also called liter), cubic centimeter (also called milliliter), cubic kilometer, etc., depending on how big or small is the thing you want to measure.Cubic meter would be the standard unit; other units are cubic decimeter (also called liter), cubic centimeter (also called milliliter), cubic kilometer, etc., depending on how big or small is the thing you want to measure.Cubic meter would be the standard unit; other units are cubic decimeter (also called liter), cubic centimeter (also called milliliter), cubic kilometer, etc., depending on how big or small is the thing you want to measure.Cubic meter would be the standard unit; other units are cubic decimeter (also called liter), cubic centimeter (also called milliliter), cubic kilometer, etc., depending on how big or small is the thing you want to measure.
Liter and volume are directly related, as a liter is a unit of measurement for volume in the metric system. One liter is equivalent to 1,000 cubic centimeters (cm³) or 1 cubic decimeter (dm³). This relationship allows for easy conversions between liters and other volume measurements, making it a standard unit for measuring liquids and gases. In summary, a liter quantifies the amount of space an object or substance occupies.
Yes, but only if you really think of pure water. The volume of 1 litre or 1 cubic decimeter of pure water weigh 1 kilogram. But not other materials, like syrup or oil. For those calculations you need the specific weight of that material.
The main SI unit is the cubic meter, other SI unit include the cubic decimeter (= liter), the cubic centimeter (= milliliter), etc.; in general, you can cube any unit of length (cubic foot, cubic parsec, etc.). There are also some units of volume that are not specifically related to a length, such as the gallon.
A liter is very close to 1 kilogram of pure water at maximum density under pressure of 1 atmosphere. It is also very close to 1 cubic decimeter, or 1/1,000th of a cubic meter. For much more complete information: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liter
A dm (decimeter) is a unit of length; a liter is a unit of volumen. You can't convert one to the other.A cubic dm, on the other hand, is exactly the same as a liter.
Because they refer to the exact same measurement. A liter is usually - it gets tricky actually, because there are really several definitions of liter, but the one we usually use is defined as the volume of one kilogram of water. 1 gram is also defined as the volume of 1 cubic centimeter (cm3) of water. This means that 1 gram = 1/1000 liter or 1 milliliter (ml) or (in other words) 1 ml = 1 cm3
Measuring cups and graduated cylinders are used to measure capacity. After the measurement is taken, the result can be expressed in any unit of volume. The list includes but is not limited to: -- milliliter -- liter -- cubic centimeter -- cubic meter . . etc.
The answer is .9999750006 decimters cubed to one liter. Therefore, one liter is equal to exactly 1.000028 decimeters cubed. However, for practicallity's sake, this is usually rounded to 1. Therefore, for most applications (e.g. chemistry homework, etc.), one cubic decimeter is equal to one liter. In other words, decimeters cubed and liters are basically the same.
1 kilogram is the weight of 1 liter of non-salt water. That is the scientific standard. 1 gram per cubic centimeter (cc). 1000 grams in a kilogram and 1000 cc in a liter.
Strictly speaking no - the liter is a non-SI unit. However it is very widely accepted being equivalent to a dm3. So the m3 is the official SI unit of volume and other derivations of it e.g. mm3 which is equivalent to the ml - or milliliter. The m3 is such a large unit that liters are very often used and totally accepted.
Liter is a unit of volume measurement in the metric system. It is equal to 1 cubic decimeter or 1,000 cubic centimeters. It is commonly used to measure fluids such as water, beverages, and other liquid substances.