A cube with a volume of 8.61 cubic feet can hold 244 liters.
You would have to know the density also. Mass = volume X density
The volume would be 27 times greater as 3 cubed is 27 times greater than 1 cubed, the volume would therefore be 27 centimetres cubed. 1x1x1=1 3x3x3=27
No, volume is cubed. Area is squared, for example, 2cm^2 Volume would be in cubic centimeters, meters, etc.
they share the same volume. In the Metric system, Liters are a measurement of volume, not of weight. Therefore, 10 Liters of water would share the same volume as 10 Liters of Mercury.
The diameter would be 3.855 cm
Meters squared is not a unit of volume like liters. Therefore, you cannot convert that to liters. If you are trying to convert CUBIC meters to liters, then the conversion is 1000 liters in one cubic meter.well a square meter is 10000 cm squared. (100 cm by 100 cm). a liter is a unit of volume and is in cm cubed, not squared. So to answer your question how many liters are in a square meter, you need to add a third dimension. A square meter that is one cm thick, there would be (100 x 100 x 1 cm) = 10000 cm cubed. A cm cubed is a milliliter, so that would make there be 10 liters.
I would use to measure a volume of a glass liters. Signed Luini, liters are bigger than milliliters and liters are about the volume of a glass.
a volume can be measured in meters cubed (m3), centimeters cubed (cm3) or other measurings. A room's volume would probably be measured in meters cubed.
Remember, that the scale for volume is always cubed..... so you would want to take 100 x 100 x 100 to find the enlarged volume. The volume of the enlarged cone would be 1,000,000 cm cubed The answer given is incorrect. In order to work out the enlarged volume, you should take the original volume and multiply this by the linear scale factor cubed. In this case, the correct answer would be 800cm cubed, arrived at by taking the original volume of 100cm. cubed, and multiplying by the scale factor (2) cubed; 2 x2 x2 = 8.
cm³ (cm cubed)
Centimeters cubed
Liters are a measurement of volume. The weight of that volume would depend on what the substance is. For example, 9 liters of water would weigh less than 9 liters of oil.
You cannot associate these directly as one is in volume and one is length. Volume is length cubed. If you meant millimetre cubed, then the answer would be 1000.
167 liters. Your welcome:)
You would have to know the density also. Mass = volume X density
The volume would be 27 times greater as 3 cubed is 27 times greater than 1 cubed, the volume would therefore be 27 centimetres cubed. 1x1x1=1 3x3x3=27
No, volume is cubed. Area is squared, for example, 2cm^2 Volume would be in cubic centimeters, meters, etc.