You DON'T
A device that measures natural gas is called a a meter
The tone, or frequency of sound depends on the density of the medium that it is travelling through. Without information about the composition of the natural gas, it temperature and pressure, it is not possible to work out its density and so the tone of sounds propagating through it.
Liquified natural gas has about 1/600th of the volume of natural gas at standard temperature and pressure, so 1 m3 of natural gas would be about 0.001666 m3, or 1.67 liters, of LNG.
Usually in homes its just the gas meter that is checked often by city workers.
You DON'T
A device that measures natural gas is called a a meter
The volume of gas in a cubic meter is one cubic meter. But perhaps that is not the real question?
The tone, or frequency of sound depends on the density of the medium that it is travelling through. Without information about the composition of the natural gas, it temperature and pressure, it is not possible to work out its density and so the tone of sounds propagating through it.
Liquified natural gas has about 1/600th of the volume of natural gas at standard temperature and pressure, so 1 m3 of natural gas would be about 0.001666 m3, or 1.67 liters, of LNG.
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You nincompoop I am artyfarty2001
Usually in homes its just the gas meter that is checked often by city workers.
Fluorine gas is highly toxic. You can use a canary and see if it dies.
The calorific value of natural gas is approximately 11 kj per metre3. The exact value will depend of the compounds present in it.
Most natural gas companies attempt to obtain an actual meter reading every other month. From time to time, the natural gas company may not be able to get an actual reading from your meter. If your meter is inside your home (usually in the basement), behind a locked gate, or guarded by the family dog, you may see estimated readings on your natural gas bill. To get an estimated usage, the company uses a sophisticated formula that takes many factors, like the outside temperature, into account. For most customers, the difference between the estimated and actual usage is adjusted when the meter is read by the natural gas company the following month. However, for customers that have inaccessible meters, their bills may be estimated for several months in a row.
Without knowing whether this is atmospheric-pressure natural gas, pipeline-pressure or compressed natural gas (and the pressure it's been compressed to), or liquefied natural gas, this is an unanswerable question.