v = Air velocity ( m/s ) A = Cross-sectional Area ( m2 ) 1 m3 = 1000 L Q = v*A, where Q= volumetric flow rate Q = ( m/s ) * ( m2 ) = ( m3 / s ) Now to convert L/s, multiple by 1000 (Since: (m3/s)*(1000L/1m3) = L/s Example: Pipe inner radius = 1 m, air velocity = 10 m/s Q = (pi * 12)*(10) = 31.4159 m3/s *(1000 L/ 1m3)= 31415.9 L/s Hope this helps!
One cubic meter also equals 1000 liters or one million cubic centimeters.
thus if a pool is emptying at a rate of 1 liter per second it is the same as saying it is emptying at a rate of .0001 cubic meters per second.
you can say a liquid pours at 10 liters per second but you cant convert that to a length
Metres is length, litres is volume. You need to have the other two dimensions to make it volume
you need to divide by the density of the liquid (usually in g/ml, or kg/litre will do)
Equation: cubic meters per second x 60,000 = liters per minute
You probably mean meters cubed ... I hope !
Anyway, here's the conversion factor that should get you all fixed up: 1 m3 = 1,000 liters.
Cubic meters x 1,000 = liters
30.33 cubic meters = 30,330 liters
Multiply cubic meters by 1,000: 0.077 x 1,000 = 77 liters
(multiply cubic meters by 1,000) 8,555 cm3 x 1,000 = 8,555,000 liters
Conversion: mL per hour x 2.77777778 × 10-10 = cubic meters per second
cubic meters x 1,000 = liters
liters x 0.001 = cubic meters
The conversion factor is .277. So, cubic meters per hour x .277 = liters per second
To convert cubic metres to litres - Multiply by 1000
You cannot convert a volume to an area. You can, however, convert liters to cubic meters, since both are volumes. There are 1000 liters in a cubic meter, so to convert to cubic meters divide by 1000 liters / cubic meter.
Cubic meters x 1,000 = liters
Equation: liters per second x 86.4 = cubic meters per day
To convert cubic meters to liters, you multiply by 1000.
Like so: cubic meters x 1,000 = liters
30.33 cubic meters = 30,330 liters
Multiply cubic meters by 1,000: 0.077 x 1,000 = 77 liters
Multiply cubic meters by 1,000 to get liters.